Roehamptonis an area in southwestLondon,in thePutneySW15 postal district, and takes up a far western strip, running north to south, in theLondon Borough of Wandsworth.[2]It contains a number of largecouncil houseestates and is home to theUniversity of Roehampton.
Roehampton | |
---|---|
Roehampton High Street | |
Location withinGreater London | |
Population | 16,132 (2011 Ward of Roehampton and Putney Heath)[1] |
OS grid reference | TQ225745 |
London borough | |
Ceremonial county | Greater London |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | LONDON |
Postcode district | SW15 |
Dialling code | 020 |
Police | Metropolitan |
Fire | London |
Ambulance | London |
UK Parliament | |
London Assembly | |
Etymology
editTheRoein Roehampton's name is thought to refer to the large number ofrooksthat still inhabit the area.
Location
editRoehampton is centred about 6.3 miles (roughly 10 km) south-west ofCharing Cross.It occupies high land, withBarnesto the north,PutneyandPutney Heathto the east, andRichmond ParkandRichmond Park Golf Courseto the west. To the south is Roehampton Vale, that straddles theA3,withWimbledon CommonandPutney Valebeyond.
History
editRoehampton was originally a small village – with only 14 houses during the reign ofHenry VII– with the area largely forest and heath. The population gradually increased in the 18th and 19th centuries as it became a favoured residential outlying suburb for summer villas and larger houses set in parkland, following the opening ofPutney Bridgein 1729.[3]Several of the original houses survive.
Roehampton House(Grade I) byThomas Archerwas built between 1710 and 1712, and enlarged bySir Edwin Lutyensin 1910. Until 2008, it was the administrative centre forQueen Mary's Hospital.The building was Grade I Listed in 1978 when it was still being used by the hospital.[4]It was subsequently developed into private flats.
Parkstead House(Grade I), built in 1760 forWilliam Ponsonby, 2nd Earl of Bessborough,was the home of the socialiteLady Caroline Lambbefore being acquired in 1861 for use as a seminary by theJesuitsand renamed Manresa House.[5]Gerard Manley Hopkins,the Jesuit poet, lived there. Parkstead House is now owned byRoehampton University,as are a number of other surviving 18th century houses. These includeMount Clare(Grade I) built in 1772 for George Clive, cousin ofLord Clive;Grove House(Grade II*), built originally for Sir Joshua Vanneck in 1777 –Capability Brownis reputed to have laid out the grounds; and Downshire House (Grade II*) built in 1770 and once occupied by theMarquess of Downshire.[6]
Templeton House, a Georgian mansion, was built in the 1780s and its first resident was Lady Elizabeth Templetown. In 1930, the building was converted into student flats; during both World Wars, it was used as a hospital. From the winter of 1919 to the spring of 1920,Winston Churchilllived at Templeton House while it was owned byFreddie Guestand his wife Amy.[7]After its sale in 2010, the new owners again converted the building into a single family home, with the exterior also restored.[8][9]Some of the filming for series 3 ofDownton Abbeywas completed at Templeton House.[10]
Originally a part of PutneyAnglicanparish,Roehampton became a separate parish in 1845, after the building of Holy Trinity Church on Roehampton Lane in 1842.[3]TheSociety of JesusfoundedSt Joseph Churchin Roehampton in 1869 from thenovitiatethat becameWhitelands College.
The MaharajahDuleep Singhlived for a time in Ashburton House in Roehampton with the family of SirJohn Spencer Loginand LadyLena Login.Lady Login wrote in her memoirs that the Prince Consort and the Prince of Wales visited him there on one occasion.[11]
DuringWorld War Ithere was aRoyal Naval Air ServiceKite Balloon Training Schoolbased on land now part of the university and golf course.[12]
Much of the old village of Roehampton still remains, dominated by large detached houses. An old watering trough for Victorian carriage-horses exists at the junction of Medfield Street and Roehampton Lane.[5]
Council housing
editTheLondon County Council(LCC) built the Roehampton Estate in the 1920s and 1930s (later renamed the Dover House Estate) and theAlton Estatein the 1950s, covering many of the large gardens and woodlands in the area.
Dover House Estateis one of a number of importantLondon County Councilcottage estatesinspired by theGarden City movement.The land was previously the estates of two large houses,Dover HouseandPutney Park House,which were purchased by theLCCsoon afterWorld War I.Dover House was demolished for the new estate, butPutney Park Houseremains. The common characteristic of the LCC cottage estates is picturesque housing influenced by theArts and Craftsstyle. It was the intention at Dover House Estate to create housing in groups that overlooked or had access to open space, to provide a sense of intimacy and individuality, and the estate was laid out with communal green spaces. Allotments were also provided in three backland areas behind houses, two of which remain, the third subsequently infilled by housing.
TheAlton Estate,one of the largest council estates in the UK, occupies an extensive swathe of land west of Roehampton village and runs between Roehampton Lane and Richmond Park Golf Course. The estate has a mix of low and high-risemodernist architectureconsisting of Alton East (1958) styled a subtleScandinavian-influencedvernacularand its slightly later brutalist counterpart: Alton West (1959). At Highcliffe Drive on Alton West the LCC essentially retained the Georgian landscape and placed within it five ultra modern slab blocks: Binley, Winchfield, Dunbridge, Charcot and Denmead Houses, (all grade II*) inspired byLe Corbusier'sUnite d'Habitation.At the time of its completion in 1958, Alton West was considered by many British architects to be the crowning glory of post-World War II council housing.[13]
The estate is now part of a regeneration scheme with a number of government initiatives such asSureStarthelping to tackle issues of poverty andsocial exclusion.
Recent history and today
editRoehampton contains a number ofconservation areas,covering much of the Alton and Dover House estates, and the centre of Roehampton Village. This includes theKing's Head Inn,at the foot of Roehampton High Street and theMontague Arms,Medfield Street, both of 17th century origin.[14]
In 2007,Justine Greening,the localMember of Parliament,secured a commitment to install a pedestrian entrance to Richmond Park from the Alton Estate.[15]A footpath and cycleway from Chohole Gate to Richmond Park was opened in 2014.[16]
Roehampton is home to a number of well-known educational institutions: theUniversity of Roehamptonhas approximately 10,500 students housed in 4 colleges and around 4,000 students studying online; the new Queen Mary's Hospital with its renowned amputee rehabilitation centre opened in 2006 is a teaching centre for medical students based in Wandsworth NHS Primary Care Trust;Kingston Universityhas one of its campuses in Roehampton Vale;South Thames Collegealso has a campus on Roehampton Lane. It has long been a major centre for teacher-training, being the site of two constituent colleges (Digby Stuart CollegeandFroebel College) of the former federal Roehampton Institute of Higher Education (now the University of Roehampton), as well asSouth East England's only lecturer-training college (Garnett College) which eventually moved and became part of theUniversity of Greenwich.
Apart from education, other notable institutions based here includeThe PrioryClinic, theBank of EnglandSports Centre,Rosslyn ParkRugby Football Club, and theRoehampton Club.TheInternational Tennis Federation(ITF) moved to Roehampton from Baron's Court in 1998, and in 2007 theLawn Tennis Associationmoved to a newly built headquarters next to the ITF.
Demography
editIn the2011 census,the Wandsworth ward of Roehampton and Putney Heath did not record a single majority ethnic group. The largest ethnicity in the ward wasWhite Britishat 45%, followed byother White(18.4%),Black African(7.9%), and other Asian (4.6%).[17]
In 2011, 59.1% of people living in Roehampton and Putney Heath were born in England. The other most common census responses were those born inPoland(5.6%),Pakistan(1.8%),Ireland(1.6%), thePhilippines(1.6%),South Africa(1.2%),Ghana(1.1%),Germany(1.0%), andSomalia(1.0%).[18]
The religious makeup of Roehampton and Putney Heath is 52.9%Christian,23.6% no religion, 11.1%Muslim,1.4%Hindu,1.1%Buddhist,0.7%Jewish,0.4%Sikh,and 0.2%agnostic.[18]
Transport
editRoehampton is served by bus route 170 (to Victoria), 265 (to Putney and Tolworth), 419 (to Richmond), 493 (to Richmond and Tooting), 430 (to South Kensington) and 85 (to Putney and Kingston).
BarnesandPutneyare the nearest railway stations. Roehampton University has campaigned to have nearby Barnes station renamedBarnes & Roehampton,as the station is situated between the two areas.[19]
Depiction in fiction, film and television
editRoehampton is an important location inH. G. Wells' novelThe Sleeper Awakes.Roehampton, along with five other locations in London, includingWimbledon Park,Norwood,BlackheathandShooter's Hill,form a series of rudimentary airports known as "Flying Stages". The Flying Stage at Roehampton is the scene for a major battle in the plot.
The Alton Estate has featured as a film and television location.Fahrenheit 451(1966) used some of the estate as its backdrop for a bleak dystopian society of the future.Thames Television's film divisionEuston Filmsused the Danebury Avenue area of the estate to film the opening scenes ofSweeney 2(1978), the sequel to the filmSweeney!(1977).
Notable residents
edit- James Beck(1929–1973), actor
- Sam Bird,racing driver
- Emily Blunt,actress
- Simon Le Bon,lead singer ofDuran Duran
- Earl of Cork and Orrery,author
- Gwendolen Fitzalan-Howard, Duchess of Norfolk
- William Harvey,physician (discovered the principles of blood circulation)
- Jack Hawkins,actor
- Gerard Manley Hopkins,poet
- Roy Kinnear,actor
- Dawid Malan,cricketer (MCCC)[20]
- William Pitt the Younger,prime minister[3]
- Brian Rix,farceur
- Ryan Sessegnon,footballer
- SirJoseph Simpson,Chief Commissioner of theMetropolitan Police
- Peter Westbury,racing driver
Nearest places
editBibliography
edit- Putney and Roehampton, A Brief HistoryThe Putney Society, (1992)
- Putney and Roehampton PastD J Gerhold, (1994)
- Putney in 1636 Nicholas Lane's MapD J Gerhold, (1994)
- Villas and Mansions of Roehampton and Putney HeathD J Gerhold, (1997)ISBN0905121058
- Roehampton in 1617 The Village SurveyedDorian Gerhold, (2001)
See Also
editReferences
edit- ^"Wandsworth Ward population 2011".Neighbourhood Statistics.Office for National Statistics. Archived fromthe originalon 11 February 2017.Retrieved12 October2016.
- ^A City of Villages: Promoting a sustainable future for London's suburbs(PDF).Greater London Authority.August 2002.ISBN1-85261-393-9.Archived(PDF)from the original on 29 May 2013.Retrieved16 January2014.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - ^abcH.E. Malden, ed. (1912)."Parishes: Putney".A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 4.Institute of Historical Research. pp. 78–83.Retrieved1 August2021.
- ^Historic England(6 March 2008)."Roehampton House (at Queen Marys Hospital) (1357694)".National Heritage List for England.Retrieved26 January2021.
- ^ab"Parkstead House".britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.Retrieved2 August2021.
- ^"Downshire House".britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.Retrieved7 January2013.
- ^Winston and Clementine: The Personal Letters of the Churchills, page 220 to 224
- ^"Templeton House's escape from demolition and oblivion to become an incredible rarity: a country estate within the M25".Country Life.13 December 2020.Retrieved16 December2020.
probably in the 1780s – that Templeton House must have been built. The house is first recorded on a map of 1787.
- ^"Inside the £32million restoration of London's Templeton House, Winston Churchill's former mansion".House and Garden.13 December 2020.Retrieved5 July2019.
The sprawling 28,000-square-foot property, with its amber brick façade and stately decor, is nestled in the quiet suburb of Roehampton in southwest London, and was once the home of Winston Churchill.
- ^"The $40 Million Renovation at nearly 240 years old, Templeton House was a fixer-upper of seriously epic, outrageously expensive proportions".The Wall Street Journal.17 April 2019.Retrieved16 December2020.
its first occupant, in 1786, was Lady Elizabeth Templetown, the wife of an Irish aristocrat and an artist
- ^Login, E. Dalhousie (1970).Lady Login's Recollections: Court Life and Camp Life, 1820-1904(2nd ed.). Jullundur City: Languages Department, Punjab. p. 117.
- ^Flute, Dick (2014)."Roehampton".UK Airfields and Airports.
- ^Harwood, Elain (2003).England: a Guide to Post-War Listed Buildings(rev. ed.). London: Batsford.ISBN0-7134-8818-2.
- ^"Wandsworth: conservation areas".wandsworth.gov.uk.Retrieved4 August2021.
- ^"Alton Estate entrance to Richmond Park agreed".Justine Greening's Parliamentary Website.Archived fromthe originalon 28 February 2012.
- ^"Opening of Chohole pathway and Beverley Brook Bridge in Richmond Park".Latest News.royalparks.org.uk. 19 August 2014.Retrieved1 August2021.
- ^Good Stuff IT Services."Roehampton and Putney Heath – UK Census Data 2011".Ukcensusdata.Retrieved10 December2019.
- ^ab"Roehampton and Putney Heath Demographics (Wandsworth, England)".Roehampton-and-putney-heath.localstats.co.uk.Retrieved10 December2019.
- ^"6.4 Objective: Improve the transportation links to the campus"(PDF).Roehampton University Campus Strategy.October 2008. pp. 11–12.Archived(PDF)from the original on 21 February 2012.Retrieved21 October2009.
- ^"Dawid Malan".Player profiles—England.ESPNcricinfo.September 2008.Retrieved15 September2009.
External links
edit- Local HistoryLondon Borough of Wandsworth