At the junction with Hampstead High Street is Hampstead tube station, which was originally planned to be called Heath Street. Some of the tiling at the platform level still bears the original name.[2] The southernmost stretch of the road was developed much later than rest during the late nineteenth century to connect Heath Street with the newly built Fitzjohns Avenue running to Swiss Cottage. It replaced a number of existing alleys.[3]
Until the early nineteenth century it was known as Heath Mount, a name commemorated by the Heath Mount School.[4] Historically it was the main street in Hampstead.[5] Hampstead became a popular resort for Londoners following the establishment of the Hampstead Wells spa in 1698. The Upper Flask Tavern on Heath Street catered to the traffic and was a meeting place for the Kit Kat Club of the early eighteenth century. The site later became Queen Mary's Maternity Hospital.[6]
References
^Cherry, Bridget & Pevsner, Nikolaus (2002). London 4: North. Yale University Press. pp. 220–221.
^Coysh, Louise (2014). Labyrinth: A Journey Through London's Underground by Mark Wallinger. Art Books Publishing. p. 207.
^Wade, Christopher (2000). The Streets of Hampstead. Camden History Society. p. 65.