This is an interesting social history of Dolphin Square, opened in 1936, and boasting thirteen blocks of deluxe flats, gardens, shops, restaurants, a pool, library, beauty parlour, theatre booking office, laundry service, childcare, postal collections, in the heart of Pimlico. Westminster. Tenants cannot buy apartments outright, which perhaps has led to a great change of those living there than might have occurred otherwise.
Author Simon Danczuk takes readers through the thirties, into the war years, the glamorous fifties, swinging sixties, slightly uncertain seventies and into the present. Along the way, the tenants range from the famous to the infamous, including names such as Oswald and Diana Mosley, Bud Flanagan, Sid James, Diana Dors, Christine Keeler and Mandy Rice-Davies, spy John Vassall and Maxwell Knight.
Wartime London saw those with strongly opposing viewpoints crossing paths, with Mosley renting an apartment, while neighbours included the opera loving sisters, Ida and Louise Cook, who travelled to the Third Reich to smuggle out the jewels and furs of Jewish refugees, unable to take any of thie assets out of Germany. When bombs fell, Dolphin Square wisely organised bomb shelters into snorers, non-snorers and pet owners.
Of course, a book like this can only touch, fleetingly, on many of the events that have links to Dolphin Square, from IRA bombers, the Free French Government, spies, scandals, politics, theatre, music, film, affairs and accusations of child abuse. All of life can be shown through the mirror of a certain place, especially if that place was as central as Dolphin Square - close to Central London with all its amenities, theatres, and the Houses of Parliament. I enjoyed reading this and, even if it could not contain enough depth about all the people that populate the pages, then it could prompt you to discover further books on certain subjects that particularly interest you.