3 Jeffreys St

Numbers 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 Jeffreys St were built as Molesworth Place, sometimes called Moleworth Place. This set of buildings reached around the corner to Kentish Town Rd, which is where the first buildings in this arrangement were completed in 1821. Numbers 1, 2 and 3 Molesworth Place were redesignated as part of Kentish Town Road in 1863, with the rest of the houses becoming part of Jeffrey's St in 1881.

First numbered as 5 Molesworth Place

1823 Jan George Broughton
1825 July George Broughton
1826 July George Broughton
1827 Jan George Broughton
1828 Jan George Broughton
1829 P Cox
1831 Jan P Cox
1834 Jan H Barron
1841 Sept H Barron
1842 Sept H Barron
1844 Sept H Barron
1846 March H Barron
1847 March William Robertson
1848 Sept William Robertson
1850 William Robertson
1851 Sept Eastwood
1853 Eastwood
1855 George Smith
1858 Cadney
1863 Adams
1866 Archer
1871 Archer
1875 Archer
1880 Archer
1881 Thomas (59) and Eliza (46) Archer plus one grown child and one lodger.

1881 re-numbered as 3 Jeffreys Street
1885 James Danes

1980s Roger Steptoe, English composer and pianist, lived at this address in the early 1980s while professor of composition at the Royal Academy of Music. He was often visited by Ursula Vaughan Williams (poet, author and widow of the great composer Ralph Vaughan Williams) who came to help Roger organise his garden. He composed the opera King of Macedon (1978-79) to one of her librettos, based on a stage play by Charles Jockelson. As a pianist Steptoe recorded the first modern performance of the Four Last Songs by Vaughan Williams.