PREFACE.
The main work of the London Survey Committee, namely
the recording of old London, parish by parish, is rendered
possible only by the generous co-operation of the London
County Council, which bears the whole cost of publication, and
contributes its full share in the material of the records. From time
to time, however, our slender funds permit of the issue of extra
volumes, monographs on buildings of note, and in this department
of our work we allow ourselves some licence in interpreting the area
of "Greater London," which used to form part of the style and title
of the Committee. Many years before the beautiful house known as
Swakeleys was threatened with destruction in the welter of a newly–developed building estate, the Committee had projected a volume
devoted to its record, and its danger stimulated their efforts. This
record is now complete and it is a pleasure to be able to thank the
many friends who have assisted the Committee to carry out their
purpose.
But first we must record the indebtedness which London and
Middlesex owes to Mr. Humphrey Talbot for his timely action in
buying the house and removing for ever the menace which threatened
it, and we must pay our tribute to the memory of the Honble.
Mervyn Herbert, whose scheme for its use by the Foreign Office
Sports Association has so happily given it an admirable function,
and a guardianship. It is the Committee's belief that the monuments
of the past, which were built to endure, are worthy of preservation
for the practical uses of to-day, and that such use can be found in
every case with a little patience and thought. Swakeleys has been
fortunate in having champions who could translate their aspirations
into a tangible and useful enterprise.
We are indebted to the Foreign Office Sports Association, and to
Mr. Talbot, who has remained a tenant of the first floor of the house,
for the very full facilities which they have granted our members for
making drawings and taking photographs. Mr. Talbot has also
kindly placed at our disposal all the information which he has
collected with reference to the house. Considerable help in tracing
the descent of the manor has been given by Mr. Frank Marcham,
who has kindly furnished extracts from a large number of original
documents. Mr. Alan G. Burr has contributed extracts from the
parish registers, and Mr. Thomas F. Ford, one of our members, who
assisted in the restoration of the Swakeleys mortuary chapel at
Ickenham Church, has provided momoranda, rubbings of inscriptions and photographs of the chapel itself. Help has also been
received from the rector, the Rev. D. W. W. Carmichael, and
Mr. A. G. Burr. Our enquiries have been courteously answered
by the English Place-Name Society, and the Society of Genealogists
(Mrs. Kathleen Bell), Messrs. A. O. Bevan and J. E. Bowers of
Nantwich, and Mr. George H. Viner, as well as by Mr. L. Hickman
Barnes, Clerk to the Grocers' Company. Miss Marjorie B. Honeybourne has also given much assistance in consulting documents in
the Public Record Office. The contribution under Mrs. Esdaile's
name (Appendix C) forms a most welcome addition to our volume,
and we have to thank Mr. Edward Hudson for permission to reproduce the painting of the Viner family, which appeared in Country
Life.
The drawings and photographs provided by our own members are
enumerated in the list of illustrations, and these have been augmented
by contributions from Messrs. A. H. Down, A. E. Gurney, A. F.
Lodge, Edward Pady, and Geoffrey D. Hartan, to whom the Committee's thanks are due. I should like also to acknowledge the
assistance I have received in the preparation of the text. Miss Jeffries
Davis has read the proofs besides contributing the important appendix
(B) on Charles I and his attitude towards Sir Edmund Wright. Mr.
W. McB. Marcham has furnished a number of items in the history
of the manor, together with the document printed in Appendix A.
Both he and Mr. A. R. Martin have read the proofs and provided
additional material. Others who have kindly examined the proofs
and sent useful suggestions are Mr. W. W. Braines, Mr. Oswald
Barron, and the Rev. E. E. Dorling, who has again been good
enough to provide the heraldic illustrations.
WALTER H. GODFREY.