Capo di Monte at 3 Judges's Walk on Windmill Hill is a house in Hampstead in the London Borough of Camden. It is listed Grade II on the National Heritage List for England. [1] [2] The house stands on the corner of Upper Terrace and Judge's Walk. [3]
The house dates to the late 18th century and has been considerably altered. [1] It was in existence by 1762. [3] It is rendered in stucco with weatherboard extensions to the rear. It is 2 storeys with a basement. The actress Sarah Siddons stayed at the house from 1804 to 1805; an "S" above the door commemorates her residence. [1] [4] Mavis Norris, in The Book of Hampstead, describes the house as 'three cottages knocked into one'. [5] The house subsequently became known as Siddons Cottage. The secretary of the Athenaeum Club, a Mr. Macgrath, lived in the house after Siddons. [6]
The art historian and administrator Kenneth Clark and his family moved to Capo di Monte in 1941, having previously rented Upton House in Gloucestershire. [7] Stephen Spender and his wife Natasha regularly dined with the Clarks at the house during the war. [8] The Clarks moved from the house to nearby Upper Terrace House in 1946. [9] The house later became the residence of Marghanita Laski. [4]
The house was put up for sale for £6.9 million in 2020. [10]
A drawing of Capo di Monte by Frederick Charles Richards is in the collection of the Newport Museum in Newport, Wales. [11]