SUNBURY
Sunbury (fn. 1) lies on the north bank of the Thames just
upstream from Hampton. (fn. 2) In 1930 the old parish
was enlarged to include Ashford Common (307 a.).
Subsequent changes in the 1930's added Feltham
Hill (98 a.) and 2 acres of Hampton parish to Sunbury and transferred one acre from Sunbury to
Hampton. Also in 1930, Shepperton and Littleton
parishes were added to the urban district of Sunbury
on Thames, which had been created in 1894 and had
until then comprised only the parish of Sunbury. (fn. 3)
This article is concerned with the old parish of
Sunbury, which in 1930, before all these changes,
covered 2,658 acres. (fn. 4) The parish is bounded on the
south-east by the River Thames, except in several
places where the boundary follows what are no
doubt earlier courses of the river, so that Sunbury
Lock Ait and the lock itself and bits of the north
bank lie in Walton on Thames (Surr.). (fn. 5) The River
Ash forms most of the south-western boundary, and
the eastern and north-eastern boundaries also follow
a stream and rivulet. The boundaries of Sunbury
which are described in a charter of 962 may well
have corresponded to the later boundaries of the
manor; (fn. 6) they were certainly not those of the parish,
and the date when the parish boundaries were fixed,
dividing the manor of Halliford between Sunbury
and Shepperton, is not known. The fact that meadow
at Halliford belonged in 962 to Sunbury manor
although Halliford manor-house and demesne are
later known to have lain in Shepperton (fn. 7) may have
some bearing on this.
The parish is without significant physical features.
The surface is composed of gravels and brick-earth
and falls from a little below 50 feet in the north to 25
feet by the Thames. (fn. 8) The hamlets of Sunbury and
Kempton, first mentioned respectively in 962 and
1086, (fn. 9) stand on slight rises on the river bank at
junctions between the main road along the river
from Kingston to Chertsey and lanes (Green Street
and French Street) running northwards to the
common. Charlton and Upper Halliford lie away
from the river in the west of the parish: Charlton is
mentioned in 1086 and Halliford in 962, though no
reference has been found to the hamlet of Upper
Halliford before 1274. (fn. 10) Each of these settlements
represented the nucleus of a medieval manor, except
for Upper Halliford which was probably the lesser
of the two hamlets within Halliford manor, and each
of the manors except Charlton, which had no river
frontage, formed a narrow strip running back from
the river over the open fields to the common. (fn. 11)
Charlton lay on the edge of the common, which
covered most of the parish north of the approximate
line of Nursery Road. To the south of Charlton and
around the other hamlets lay the open fields. By
the 18th century, when they had been reduced by
inclosures on the edges, these were known as Charlton
Field, between Charlton Road and Upper Halliford
Road; Sunbury Field, between Upper Halliford
Road and Green Street; and Kempton Field, on the
east of Green Street; each of these lay across
manorial boundaries. The common meadow lay by
the river in the south-west. In 1246 the first inclosure
for a park was made at Kempton. Later the park
covered much of the area north-east of Kempton
village and extended into Hanworth. During the
Middle Ages the royal manor-house of Kempton
may have stood within the park near the site of the
present Kempton Park House. (fn. 12)
The river probably formed the chief highway of
the parish in early times, and the small alleys in
Sunbury village between Thames Street and the
river no doubt led to wharfs. One of these, called
Church Wharf, could not be reached by barges in
1897 because of silting and a few years later visits by
barges were said to be rare. (fn. 13) A ferry was conveyed
with the manor in 1604 (fn. 14) and there were two ferries
near Thames Street in 1956 which by means of the
lock foot-bridge gave access to the Surrey shore.
There are two main roads through the parish. One
of these, running from Kingston to Hampton along
the river bank, has already been mentioned as the
site of two of the ancient settlements. It crosses the
River Ash into Shepperton by Hoo Bridge, which
was mentioned in 1293 and was a foot-bridge in
1826. (fn. 15) The other main road ran across Sunbury
Common from Hampton to Staines. Its eastern
section by Kempton Park was formerly known as
Port Lane and the bridge by the boundary is still
known as Port Lane Bridge. The Staines Road was
turnpiked from 1773 to 1859, (fn. 16) but most of its
course in Sunbury lay across the common and so was
not defined before inclosure. The other roads in the
parish were tracks linking the settlements to the
common and crossing the common to the villages
beyond. Of these Green Street was known as Sunbury Lane in 1722, (fn. 17) while French Street was called
by its present name in 1799. (fn. 18) A track between them,
which formed the boundary between Sunbury and
Kempton manors, ran roughly along the line of the
modern road called the Avenue and continued
northwards to Feltham. Farther west the Upper
Halliford Road and Windmill Road gained in
importance after Walton Bridge was built in 1750. (fn. 19)
Gaston Bridge, which had been in existence at least
since the 15th century, was rebuilt at the same
time. (fn. 20) The Upper Halliford Road has been yet
more used since the Queen Mary Reservoir was
constructed in 1925, since that destroyed the road
from Ashford Common to Littleton. The farthest
west of the north-south roads is the Charlton Road,
which in 1959 still went through a deep ford at the
River Ash, thus virtually cutting Charlton off from
the growing town of Shepperton close by. There is,
however, a foot-bridge beside the ford.
The open fields and commons were inclosed in
1803, and the roads across the common were laid out
on their present lines. By this time there had been a
good deal of change in some of the areas of settlement.
In 1697 Sir Thomas Grantham, lord of Kempton
manor, built 'a fair house' at Sunbury, (fn. 21) and this
was probably the first of many large houses which
were built in the parish. (fn. 22) Sunbury was almost the
farthest upstream of the Thames villages which became popular with the upper and middle classes in the
18th century, and it never became fashionable in the
manner of Richmond, Twickenham, or Hampton. (fn. 23)
A little colony of exiled Huguenots probably accounted for a fair proportion of the gentlefolk in the parish
during the earlier years of the century. (fn. 24) By 1816 it
was possible for a perhaps over-effusive writer to
comment on the 'long range of fine domestic structures' facing the river and to add that other 'ornamental dwellings of this splendid village' lay farther
inland. (fn. 25) Among the finest of the houses was Sunbury Place (now Sunbury Court and occupied by
the Salvation Army), which lay farthest downstream
towards Hampton. There was a house on the site by
1754, (fn. 26) from which some features in the main block
of the present building seem to survive. It had been
much enlarged by 1816, when it was said to show
four fronts with an ornamental pavilion at each
corner. (fn. 27) The pavilions have been demolished and
wings have been added on either side of the sevenbay south front. The house is of red brick with
stone and cement-rendered dressings and has a
central pediment to the south front. Behind this
house and beyond Staines Road the house at
Kempton Park was rebuilt in an apparently gloomy
and unattractive Gothic style soon after 1800. It has
since been replaced once more. (fn. 28) Darby House, a
little upstream, dates from the late 18th century and
is unusual in the parish for the pointed windows on
its otherwise Georgian south front. On the corner of
Lower Hampton Road and French Street two or
three early-19th-century buildings are the only
survivors of the smaller houses of the old hamlet of
Kempton, though there are still a few good 18thcentury houses of the larger sort in French Street.
Another of them had been pulled down shortly
before 1959. Those remaining include Ivy House,
which is possibly of the very late 17th century.
Thames Street, running along the river between the
villages of Kempton and Sunbury, is still predominantly Georgian in character, and Orchard
House and Rossall House, which has been much
altered, are fine examples of the early 18th century.
Near Kempton the road is still open to the river
bank on its south side, but as it approaches Sunbury
village it is built up on both sides, this development
apparently dating from the early 18th century. The
former assembly rooms (now a factory) were housed
in a classical building of c. 1835. The manor-house
(Sunbury Park) by the church has now been demolished, but many buildings from the early 19th
century and before remain in the triangle of roads
(Church Street, Green Street, and Thames Street)
which formed the old village (see frontispiece).
They include the 'Three Fishes' in Green Street,
which was built in the 17th century. (fn. 29) Its sign is
mentioned in 1705. The 'Magpie' and the 'White
Horse' (1729) and the 'Flowerpot' (1730) are mentioned a little later (fn. 30) but have all been rebuilt. The
larger 18th-century houses in the old village include
Blakesley Lodge and Montford House in Green
Street; Brooklands, also in Green Street, may contain
work of the 17th century. Farther along Green
Street away from the river is Hawke House, which
is dated 1703 but was altered and enlarged in the
early 19th century. Beyond it again is the Rookery,
an 18th-century house covered with later roughcast. Just upstream from the village is West Lodge,
also of the 18th century. The last house upstream
was Sunbury House, which faced the river across
Fordbridge Road. It has always been identified (fn. 31)
with the house built in 1712 for Sir Roger Hudson.
This was designed by Thomas Fort (d. 1745), clerk
of the works at Hampton Court, (fn. 32) and was illustrated
in Campbell's Vitruvius Britannicus. It had a threestoried main block of seven bays connected by
curved passages to pavilions at each end. The house
on the site in 1754, however, seems to have been
much more modest, while the manor-house was then
shown with the plan of the 1712 house. (fn. 33) Sunbury
House seems to have disappeared by 1912, when a
terrace of three houses stood on the site. (fn. 34)
Upper Halliford and Charlton did not share in the
18th-century popularity of the riverside and seem to
have contained little but cottages and farm-houses.
Several houses around the green at Upper Halliford
survive from the early 19th century, while those
called Halliford Manor (fn. 35) and Halliford Home Farm
Cottage are of earlier date though they have been
much altered. Some 17th-century barns at Clock
House Farm were demolished about 1958. (fn. 36) At
Charlton the only early building is the Harrow Inn.
It is timber-framed, partly refaced in brick, and has
a thatched roof. The front range contains an open
hall of medieval origin in which a chimney was
inserted probably in the 16th or early 17th century. (fn. 37)
A windmill and poorhouse were built on the common
to the west of Green Street early in the 18th century
and the medieval windmill may have stood in that
area. (fn. 38)
Some building by the roads on the common
followed the inclosure and more large houses were
built. Some of these were at the riverside and others
were farther away, notably around Upper Halliford.
In 1859 the 'palatial residences of the nobility' were
said to be 'interspersed and disfigured by the rude
and dilapidated dwellings of the lower classes', which,
it was implied, were exceptionally poor and unhealthy. (fn. 39) In 1826 the village was served by the
Chertsey-London coaches four times a day and by
carriers. (fn. 40) In 1864 the Thames Valley Railway (now
part of the Southern Region) was opened with a
station at the north end of Green Street. The halt
at Upper Halliford was not opened until 1944, while
Kempton Park Station is only used during racemeetings. (fn. 41) A new settlement, consisting for the
most part of small houses and called Sunbury
Common or Upper Sunbury, quickly grew up round
the station and the earliest factories appeared here
towards the end of the century. (fn. 42) Meanwhile the
first of the reservoirs and waterworks buildings
which now encircle the parish appeared after the
Metropolis Water Act (1852) prohibited the taking
of water from the river below Teddington. The
first waterworks in the area were in Hampton, but
their reservoirs were extended along the riverside
into Sunbury parish in 1898. Following the cholera
epidemic of 1866, the East London Water Works in
1871 established a pumping station, filter beds, and
reservoirs, just inside the parish by the Hanworth
Road, and a pumping station by the river in Fordbridge Road. (fn. 43) The buildings were Italianate in
style and of brown brick with stone dressings.
Most of those in Hanworth Road were demolished
about 1955. (fn. 44) Those in Fordbridge Road remain,
though they have belonged to the Thames Conservancy since 1924. (fn. 45) The aqueduct from the Staines
Reservoirs was constructed across the north of the
parish about 1904, (fn. 46) and in 1925 the great Queen
Mary Reservoir was opened, extending into the
north-west corner of the parish. More works of the
Metropolitan Water Board were being constructed
in 1957 on the site of the urban district council's
former sewerage works to the east of the Reservoir. (fn. 47)
During the 20th century building has spread over
much of the eastern half of the parish and along the
river bank. The electrification of the railway in 1915
no doubt contributed to this, and Upper Sunbury,
around the station, is now virtually the centre of the
parish, with the council offices, public library, and
main post-office. The chief shopping centres are
here and in Thames Street at what is now called
Lower Sunbury. The principal industrial areas are
in Hanworth Road and Windmill Road. Except in
Upper Sunbury, where terraces and semi-detached
houses predominate, most of the modern buildings
are small detached houses and bungalows. In 1957
there were 996 council houses and flats. (fn. 48) Many
large trees have been preserved, both along the roads
and in the gardens of the original houses, though
some of these have been demolished, so that despite
the new building the district retains part of its
earlier character. The remaining spaces near French
Street were being fast filled in 1959, but there was
still open land between Green Street and the Avenue,
notably in two sports grounds and in Sunbury Park,
which is still private, though the house is gone. The
largest open tract east of Green Street is at Kempton
Park, where part of the estate has been used as a racecourse since 1876. (fn. 49) The new brick grandstand here
has been erected since the Second World War. The
rest of the estate, around the house, is still parkland
and wood, and in 1957 sheltered the only heronry in
the county. (fn. 50) Until the 1950's there was very little
new building in the western half of the parish.
Gravel-working had left many large pools around
Upper Halliford and Charlton, and the rest of the land
was open, with many market-gardens and glasshouses. (fn. 51) A good deal of land still remained open in
1959 and gravel-working was continuing, but there
was new building around Upper Halliford. At
Charlton, which until the 1950's was a comparatively
remote and completely rural hamlet, many houses
were being built in 1959 and there were new factories
to the north of the hamlet. One shop had then been
opened.
Apart from a few lords of the manor and incumbents, (fn. 52) Sunbury has not had many inhabitants of
distinction. Daniel Rogers, clerk of the Privy
Council, lived at Sunbury and was buried there in
1591. (fn. 53) Sir Nathaniel Lloyd (d. 1745), Master of
Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and Admiral Lord Hawke
(d. 1781) appear to be the only 18th-century inhabitants, apart from vicars and lords of manors,
who qualified for inclusion in the Dictionary of
National Biography. Samuel Owen, water-colour
painter, died in the parish in 1857. (fn. 54)