Maresfield Gardens

[1] Located in the London Borough of Camden, it runs parallel to the west of Fitzjohns Avenue for much of its route before curving to join it at is southern end.

The area was predominantly rural until the Victorian era when the Maryon Wilson family sold off the estate for development into residential streets as part the expansion of London[2] It is named after Maresfield in Sussex, which also belonged to the Maryon Wilsons.

Notable residents in the street have included the painter Henry Moore and the future Prime Minister Herbert Asquith.

The Freud Museum is Grade II listed[4] as is number 48 designed in the 1930s by Hermann Zweigenthal[5] and the Roman Catholic Church of St Thomas More by architect Gerard Goalen.

[6] The street features blue plaques for both Anna and Sigmund Freud as well as the collector of folk songs Cecil Sharp.

The former South Hampstead High School building.