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32 Andover Road (formerly 1 Tivoli Place)
As 1,Tivoli Place this was the start of the original 1830s terrace, which extended to the corner of Hatherley Street. The houses to the east (or left, facing the building) were built later and were named Tivoli Buildings. Tivoli Place is first mentioned in the Cheltenham Chronicle in June 1835 and the name was retained until at least the late 1950s, years after the street had been renamed Andover Road.
As early as 1844 the building may have found a commercial use, when it was briefly listed in the Cheltenham Looker On newspaper as the registered address of Mr Henry Davies, a printer and publisher, and the proprietor of the Montpellier Library. However this may have been a typographical error, as the paper was generally registered at 1,Tivoli Villas.
In 1850 these premises were certainly occupied by Mr Thomas Hale Bennett, an estate or land agent. In the 1851 census Thomas Bennett was described as a ‘building contractor living on the premises with a wife and eight children’. Mr Bennett employed eight men but unfortunately became insolvent that same year.
By 1858 Mr Edwin Chasey ran his shoe business here, at a time when boot-making was literally a “cottage industry”. He was still here in 1863, when his brother William stayed with him after becoming involved in a brawl at the Crown Inn, where he sustained a badly broken leg.


















