The information below is intended to provide further context to the caricatures and some of the features in the Standard Illustration, size A2. They are listed (generally speaking), from top to bottom as featured on the illustration itself.
Caricatures of well-known people that lived and worked locally or were otherwise inspired by Hampstead:
- Painter, John Constable lived and painted in Hampstead, initially residing in Lower Terrace before moving permanently to a house on Well Walk.
- Actor and social activist, Paul Robeson, lived on West Heath Drive.
- Percy Shelley and Leigh Hunt, central figures of the romantic era. Leigh Hunt (accompanied by Percy Shelley who often visited), lived in the Vale of Health.
- Admirals’ House. Lieutenant North (1775 to 1811) adapted the top of the house to resemble the quarter deck of a ship and hoisted a naval cannon onto the “deck” from where he would fire it to mark notable events. Another resident of Admirals’ House was George Gilbert Scott, architect of St. Pancras Station Hotel.
- French General Charles de Gaulle, led the Free France forces from a house on Frognal.
- James MacDonald, first Labour Party Prime Minister, lived on Frognal.
- Long John Silver - character from Treasure Island written by Robert Louis Stevenson who lived on Holly Walk.
- Napoleon!? Some of the bollards in Hampstead, particularly around Canon Hall, are original naval cannons that were upcycled. Their origin is somewhat contested but many locals will firmly attest to the fact that they are captured loot retrieved from Napoleon’s fleet.
- Mina Westerna, character from Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula, stalked Hampstead and the heath from St John’s graveyard.
- Architect, Richard Norman Shaw lived in a house he designed on Ellerdale Road.
- Sir Henry Vane, politician and statesman, beheaded by King Charles II, lived in a house on Vane Close.
- Photographer and photojournalist, Elizabeth "Lee" Miller lived on Downshire Hill.
- Richard Burton, actor, lived on Lyndhurst Road.
- John Keats and the Keats' museum, leading romantic poet.
- Baron Pitt of Hampstead, Labour Party politician and political activist features near the Old Town Hall.
Other features of interest:
- The two airplanes, Hawker Harrier and Supermarine Spitfire, defended London during the Blitz.
- Tudor warning beacon once stood by Whitestone Pond and was lit when the Spanish Armada threatened to invade Britain.
- The Horse Drawn Omnibus on Rosslyn Hill used to link Hampstead to London.
- The Hampstead Creperie on Hampstead High Street.
- Butcher and Fishmonger from the Hampstead Community Market