Fulham House

[1] The original house was named Passors after a family living on the site during the reign of King Edward III.

[2] It was then occupied by the cloth merchant Sir Thomas White, also a Lord Mayor of London, as well as a civic benefactor and founder of St John's College, Oxford.

[2] In 1879, the house was purchased by the local builder Parkins Hammond Jones, and the family lived there until 1902 when it was acquired by the commanding officer of the 26th Middlesex (Cyclist) Rifle Volunteer Corps for use as the headquarters of his unit.

[4][9] This unit was re-formed at Fulham as F (Royal Green Jackets) Company, The London Regiment in 1999.

[11] In 2006 the regimental headquarters of the Royal Yeomanry and its command and support squadron, the Westminster Dragoons, moved to Fulham House.