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As funny as the street you can see the street name is translated over there it’s a magnolia. Now look at those houses this are classic early 18th century houses, 1720s this were built and this were built by those Protestant refugees who came here from North of France in the 18th century. Now we had new houses coming in with this country through out the centuries, every town is something that has few of those cottages, I'm sorry—ottages because—were weavers. Well these last influx were quite wealthy and they were saw quivers and they needed a lot alike for their workshops and if you look at the top of the buildings the attic windows there that’s original equipment. That is where their workshops where.
And they had kitchens in the basement for servants, so there enough situation the upstairs and downstairs situation. The house is built later in the Western of London have a bigger area in front of the house. So more like of down to the kitchens, now the Huganos been protestant assimilated very quickly you think any other grossness heir we have Jews, we have Muslims, we have Catholics but they were Protestants and by the end of 18th century they all over disappeared. Disrupting the threading each population has HUgano bloods. And these houses, we came a little more than slums. Build that sit right’s burn your fat beast, tailoring sweat shirts that’s what this are is working in actually 100 years.
Until the 1980’s people work in the city of London, you can see how close the city is the more buildings there. Discovered this early 18th century in doorsteps gone for its liquors 20,000 pounds each you know where the story is going. Buy then up renovate then, the house in the next street was sold last summer for 2.5 million pounds. And there is quite a few selectors in this area mainly artist, yeah, but George live on this street. Traits here I'm on a few streets away, Daniel rook chunk to air it’s quite a few local celebrities, English celebrities in the neighborhood.
The building across the road there was built in 1743 by the Huganos it was built as a church. By the end of the 18th century, it was then a chapel by the end of the 19th century it was silica and by the end of the 20th century a mosque. The point of regulation of this building it can only be a house of worship. Now what I first work for stables until a guide many years ago I used to joke in this and say “Well see what the next tip of blood spring” that’s why I think the way this area is gentrifying the next incarnate for that building that would probably be a church again. Ones I'm up yet but that’s what this I think will happen. One more stop.
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