词条 | Ashley Park |
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Ashley Park is a private residential neighbourhood at Walton-on-Thames in Surrey. Its central feature was a grandiose English country house, at times enjoying associated medieval manorial rights, which stood on the site, with alterations, between 1605 and the early 1920s. Its owners included Charles Sackville, 2nd Duke of Dorset, in the 18th century and members of the Sassoon family around the turn of the 20th century. The bulk of the estate was developed into detached houses in the inter-war period, often rebuilt since in a modernist style with American influences; older examples tend to be in the Arts and Crafts style, its principal local exponent being Walter George Tarrant. Houses sold by its development company are more strictly subject to covenants mandating low density residential development. HistoryFormer house and owners of the estateThe manor here was recorded in forms similar to and including Asshlees in 1433 in the hands of Joan widow of Robert Constable who held it of the Crown.[1] This was a relatively small manor measured at {{convert|16.5|acre|km2}} as to its earliest demesne which was later extended. It is believed to have been mainly woodland with some lawns and fields. The manor was one of those incorporated into set of manors (the 'honour') of Hampton Court under the passing of the Hampton Court Manors or Manors of Hampton Court Act, 1539. The construction of the first properly documented "Ashley House" was by Lady Jane Berkeley in 1602-5 and it was altered over the centuries until demolition between 1920 and 1925.[2][3] Whether a relief (livery of seisin) was not paid, no heirs existed or through attainder, Ashley Manor escheated to the Crown before and after Berkeley's ownership as was common of many manorial estates in that period. The manor and Walton Lee and Walton Meads were granted (that is to say, the chief tenancy of the same) by James I of England to Henry Gibb in 1625; but the house may already have been long-let to wealthy tenants – it was long leased by 1630 to the brother of the King's favourite (the Duke of Buckingham) Christopher Villiers, 1st Earl of Anglesey who lived at Ashley Park and died in Windsor in April 1630. It may have been he who extended the estate as he was before ennoblement successively Gentleman of the Horse; Gentleman of the Bedchamber; Master of the Robes and five years after being granted his earldom Chief Steward or Keeper of the Honour of Hampton Court in 1628 supplemented by that of Bushy Park the year after.[4][3] Lord Anglesey's widow, Elizabeth married in 1641 {{Abbreviation|Hon.|The Honorable}} Benjamin Weston one of ten children of the financially astute Lord Treasurer to King James and King Charles, Richard Weston, 1st Earl of Portland; they continued to live there until she died in 1662.[5] Multiple owners or tenants of short duration followed before it was bought by Field Marshal Viscount Shannon in 1718, who purchased from the estate of Sir Richard Pyne, retired Lord Chief Justice of Ireland (1695-1709); he bought the manorial rights which were until then held separately,[3] and he died at the house, 20 December 1740. Lord Anglesey and Lord Shannon are buried and memorialized in the parish church of Walton-on-Thames.[3] Lord Shannon's heir and only child Grace became by marriage The Countess of Middlesex (d.1763). By her Will and by virtue of her husband dying like her childless in 1769, the estate passed to her cousin Colonel John Stephenson and thereafter his sisters.[3] The house was inherited by a cousin of these sisters: Sir Henry Fletcher, Member of Parliament for Cumberland in 1786 and stayed in his family until it was bought by Sassoon David Sassoon shortly before his death in 1867; his grandson Sassoon Joseph Sassoon and young family were the final owners of the house.[3][6] As to the final form of the house it is recorded the second Fletcher heir, among the title back-named since the 4th generation Aubrey-Fletcher baronets, "pulled down a great deal of the house at Ashley Park".[7] Other usesFormer Golf ClubAshley Park Golf Club appeared in the 1890s but ceased to exist prior to the First World War.[8] The house itself remained in the Sassoon family until it was demolished in 1920.[9] Subdivision into individual plotsRedevelopment occurred in three phases:
Roads in the final phase of sales were not offered to the local authority, limiting pavements. The scale of development has preserved many trees planted on parts which were once variously its golf course, owner's private parkland and scattered centuries-old, diverse woodland. The north-west extreme of the park became the tree-lined public green space which shares its name and in the late 20th century developed a home maintenance superstore and surface car parks. The architecture of houses is mainly inter-war Arts and Crafts style, its principal local exponent being Walter George Tarrant, who may have worked on grander examples. References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C6159609 |title=Chancery Inquisition post mortem 13 (year of) Henry VI, no. 7.|publisher=National Archives|accessdate=17 September 2017}} 2. ^{{cite web|title=Vol XXIX. Surrey Record Society Volumes: Ashley House (Walton-on-Thames) Building Accounts 1602-7 edited by M.E. Blackman, 1977.|url= http://www.surreycc.gov.uk/heritage-culture-and-recreation/archives-and-history/surrey-history-centre/surrey-record-society/list-of-surrey-record-society-publications}} 3. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite web|title=Parishes: Walton on Thames, A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3 |year=1911|page= 467-475|url= http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43009 |accessdate= 27 July 2014}} 4. ^Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume I, page 132. 5. ^Nichols, p. 192 6. ^Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh. Burke's Irish Family Records, Burkes Peerage, page 691 (London) 7. ^George Edward Cokayne, editor, The Complete Baronetage, 5 volumes (no date (c. 1900); reprint, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 1983), volume V, page 219. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Baronetage. 8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.golfsmissinglinks.co.uk/index.php/england/south-east/surrey/800-sur-ashley-park-golf-club-walton-on-thames |title=Ashley Park Golf Club|publisher= Golf’s Missing Links|accessdate= 27 July 2014}} 9. ^{{cite web|url=http://lh.matthewbeckett.com/houses/lh_surrey_ashleypark_info_gallery.html |title=Ashley Park |publisher=Matthew Beckett |accessdate=27 July 2014 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140727201958/http://lh.matthewbeckett.com/houses/lh_surrey_ashleypark_info_gallery.html |archivedate=27 July 2014 }} 10. ^Trigonometrical Survey with the roads, parks and railways, (map) Jason Wyld, 1874. Also republished elsewhere e.g. http://mapco.net/surrey1874/surrey15.htm 11. ^{{NHLE|num=1030138}} Sources
1 : Country houses in Surrey |
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