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Person    | Male  Born 4/8/1809  Died 13/11/1889

Sir Samuel Morton Peto

Sir Samuel Morton Peto

Born Woking. Started life as an apprentice brick-layer. MP and extremely wealthy construction entrepreneur.  Often called Morton Peto. Father of Harold.

In 1853 Peto bought the Regent's Park Diorama (opposite the Jerwood Medical Centre), which was failing financially, and converted it to a Baptist chapel, adding the buttressing. It remained a chapel until 1921. At some point the street it is in, originally Albany Place, was renamed Peto Place. We doubt much of interest remains inside but the building is a rare survival.

Peto managed construction firms that built many major buildings and monuments in London, including The Reform Club, The Lyceum, Nelson's Column and the new Houses of Parliament.

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This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Sir Samuel Morton Peto

Creations i

Myddelton statue - N1

Myddelton holds a map of the New River in one hand and a spade in the other. ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

Henry Raine

Henry Raine

Born into the family which ran the Star Brewhouse, Wapping, where he lived until he built Hurst House, Woodford. A pious churchman, highly respected in the community. His only wife died shortly af...

Person, Benefactor, Food & Drink

1 memorial
Booker Prize

Booker Prize

Literary award. Originally known as the Booker–McConnell Prize, after the company Booker, McConnell Ltd who first sponsored the event. When administration of the prize was transferred to the Booker...

Media, Benefactor, Literature

1 memorial
Charles Clement Walker

Charles Clement Walker

Andrew Behan has very kindly done some solid work on Walker in the census returns and at ancestry.co.uk.  From this we can say: Walker was born 1822 in Clerkenwell probably in Sutton Street (now No...

Person, Benefactor

5 memorials