Corner of Greengate Street and Mill Street, Stafford

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Date:1970

Description:On the left is a part view of Chetwynd House, Greengate Street, on the corner of Mill Street.

Chetwynd House was built around 1712-1715 by William Chetwynd, 3rd Viscount Chetwynd (1683?-1770), Member of Parliament for Stafford 1715-1722 and 1734-1770. The house was sold in the 1780s to William Horton, a shoe manufacturer. Richard Brinsley Sheridan (playwright, and M.P. for Stafford, 1780 - 1807) was a friend of Horton's and often stayed here.

In 1914 Chetwynd House became Stafford's General Post Office until it closed in 2007 and then reopened in October 2007 on the first floor of W.H. Smith’s on Greengate Street, near to the Market Square. During 2025, W.H. Smith's UK high street stores were sold and became known as TG Jones, while the original W.H. Smith brand remains in airports, stations and hospitals. The Post Office continues (2026) on the first floor of the shop.

Following closure of the Post Office at Chetwynd House it stood empty until around 2010 when it was reported in the Staffordshire Newsletter that the building had been purchased and would undergo a £3 million conversion to become a restaurant, bar, coffee shop, and wedding venue. The Post House bar and restaurant opened in 2011. The interior still maintains some of its original features.

On the opposite of Mill Street is Dobson's tobacconists, next door there is a shoe shop selling Clark's shoes.


Timeline

The timeline shows resources around this location over a number of years.

1860s
Greengate Street, Stafford,
Greengate Street, Stafford,

Note the cattle tethered by the Swan Hotel, whose sign can be seen clearly in the ...

1880s
Greengate Street, Stafford,
Greengate Street, Stafford,

These buildings on Greengate Street were replaced by the Royal Brine Baths in 1892. The ...

1900s
Greengate Street, Stafford
Greengate Street, Stafford

The Gothic building on the left was the District Bank, completed in 1907. Inside ...

1920s
Excavation of the Old Town Wall, Stafford,
Excavation of the Old Town Wall, Stafford,

The junction of Mill Bank and Greengate Street was the site of the medieval Green ...

1940s
Greengate Street, Stafford,
Greengate Street, Stafford,

On the left are the Staffordshire Advertiser Offices. The newspaper was founded ...

1970s
Mercer's Saddlers Shop, Stafford,
Mercer's Saddlers Shop, Stafford,

Mercer's shop on the corner of Bridge Street and Mill Bank, established in 1910. In ...

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Donor ref:P2000.022.0014 (18/3052)

Source: Staffordshire Museum Service

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