TEDDINGTON
The ancient parish of Teddington (fn. 1) lies on the river
bank to the south of Twickenham. The Thames here
runs from south-east to north-west so that Teddington, a narrow strip lying east and west, has a frontage
on the river of nearly two miles and stretches away
from it another two. Until about the 13th century it
formed part of the parish of Staines, (fn. 2) but since it was
surrounded by other parishes, its boundaries were
probably already established by that time. They
seem to have been coincident with those of the
manor, (fn. 3) and were probably little changed until 1912
when less than ½ acre of the parish was transferred
to Hampton Wick. (fn. 4) The parish covered 1,214 acres.
Having formerly been an independent urban district,
it was absorbed into the borough of Twickenham
in 1937 and now no longer forms a separate parish. (fn. 5)
Except for the river banks, nearly all the parish
lies between 25 and 50 feet above sea-level. (fn. 6) West of
Stanley Road and Anlaby Road the soil is Taplow
gravel, and east of that it is flood plain gravel, with a
narrow strip of alluvium along the river. (fn. 7) Until
recent times a stream rose by the Upper Lodge in
Bushy Park and ran north-west forming the boundary of Teddington and Twickenham for a short way
before joining the Thames. (fn. 8) In 1754 a water-course
was made from some springs on the common to
supply clean water to the village. (fn. 9) Apart from these
streams and from one or two other short watercourses running into the river, Teddington's only
river is the Thames. There was a weir on the Thames
at Teddington by 1345. (fn. 10) It seems to have been destroyed about 1535. (fn. 11) A new lock was opened in 1811,
and though it ceased to be the lowest on the river
about a hundred years later, it still marks the end of
the tidal reach of the river. The lock was rebuilt in
1858 and the weir which had been made with it has also
had to be rebuilt several times after floods. In 1904
the present double lock was opened. (fn. 12) A foot-bridge
over the lock was opened in 1889. (fn. 13) An island in the
Thames at Teddington called Creweyte is mentioned
in 1502. (fn. 14) In the 18th century there were two aits,
now joined to the mainland, to the south of the still
surviving Trowlock Island, and one, which has since
disappeared, to the north. (fn. 15)
The only ancient main road through Teddington
runs south from the London-Hounslow road at Isleworth to Kingston, where there was a bridge by
1219. (fn. 16) In Teddington it is called Twickenham Road
and Kingston Road. It was turnpiked in 1767. (fn. 17)
Waldegrave Road, branching out of it in Twickenham
parish and leading to Park Road and so through
Bushy Park to Hampton Court may have come into
use because of traffic to and from the royal palace.
The other present-day main roads have probably
followed much the same course since the Middle
Ages, though those over the common in the west
were only formally laid out at the inclosure in 1800. (fn. 18)
A few prehistoric finds have been made in Ted
dington, (fn. 19) but the first direct evidence that the
village existed was the mention of its name about
1100. (fn. 20) It doubtless grew up around the church,
which stood near the river at the corner of High
Street and Twickenham Road, and the manor-house,
which stood off Twickenham Road opposite the
church and a little farther north. (fn. 21) By the 18th century
houses had spread, in parts fairly thinly, along the
High Street to the village pond at the corner of Park
Road, and there was another small settlement down
Park Road on the edge of the common. The common, which was part of Hounslow Heath, covered
the whole of the parish west of Park Road and
Stanley Road. It contained 450 acres when it was
inclosed in 1800. It may once have stretched eastwards to Waldegrave Road, unless this area between
Stanley Road and Waldegrave Road was part of the
open fields. The fields lay to north and south of
the village. By 1800 a certain amount of land round
the village and a good deal near the manor-house had
been inclosed. There is no record of how or when
these earlier inclosures were effected, though one or
two small 18th-century inclosures from the common
are recorded. (fn. 22) The open-field land which remained
until 1800 consisted of North Field (47 a.) to the east
of Waldegrave Road, South Field (258 a.), covering
nearly all the parish south of the village and west of
Broom Road, and Town Mead and Mead Furlong
(74 a.) along the river east of Broom Road. (fn. 23) The two
last, as their names indicate, had probably once been
meadows and may have been the common meadow
of Southmead, while the medieval Northmead possibly lay near the church. The area of North Field as
described above also in 1800 included Sparksmead,
which was of medieval origin and perhaps lay near
the brook which divided Teddington from the open
fields of Twickenham. The names of the fields
appeared comparatively late: in the Middle Ages
they were a collection of separate furlongs rather than
large fields. (fn. 24) There was no woodland in the manor
by the 14th century. (fn. 25)
Between the 17th and 19th centuries Teddington
attained a certain popularity among the gentry,
which it owed no doubt as much to the proximity of
high fashion at Twickenham and Richmond as to its
own attractions. A number of large houses, nearly all
of which have now been pulled down, were built in
the village during this time. After the manor-house,
the first was probably that of Sir Orlando Bridgeman, lord keeper 1667-72, who retired in 1672 to the
house he had built at Teddington. (fn. 26) It stood on the
south of the village, (fn. 27) but is unlikely to have been
Bridgeman House, which seems to have been later
in date. (fn. 28) Sir Charles Duncombe (d. 1711), a banker
and one of the richest men of his age, built the house
later known as Teddington Place, in which he had
ceilings painted by Verrio and carvings by Grinling
Gibbons. (fn. 29) The house stood just south of the present
St. Alban's church, and either it or another on the
same site, latterly known as Udney Hall, was pulled
down in 1940. (fn. 30) Faversham House nearby, possibly
built in the early 18th century, belonged to the
same estate. (fn. 31) Udney House, also on the south side
of the High Street, to the west of Kingston Lane,
bore the date 1768 and the initials I. K. It was chiefly
remarkable for the fine collection of paintings made
by Robert Udney (d. 1802). The picture gallery was
demolished about 1825 and the house about 1899. (fn. 32)
Teddington Grove, in Twickenham Road, was built
about the middle of the 18th century, (fn. 33) possibly for
Moses Franks, who died at Teddington in 1789 and
was one of a group of rich and respected Jewish residents in the neighbourhood. (fn. 34) Sir William Chambers
designed an ornamental temple and greenhouse for
Franks's garden here. (fn. 35) The house afterwards belonged to John Walter (d. 1812), the founder of
The Times, and was demolished after the First World
War. (fn. 36) The only surviving 18th-century house of
importance is Elmfield House, which has three
stories and five bays, with a Doric porch added later.
It is now used as a local government office. Nos. 163,
165, and 167 High Street are a row of two-storied
cottages dated 1759 but possibly older. There are
other survivals of the 18th and early 19th centuries
in Park Road and the High Street and two or three
much altered small 17th-century buildings in the
High Street. (fn. 37) Late medieval accounts speak mostly
of tiled roofs, (fn. 38) and also of one thatched house. (fn. 39)
In 1861, although the parish contained over twice
as many houses as in 1801, Teddington still remained
little more than a village. (fn. 40) Among the houses built
between these dates was Teddington Hall, which was
said in 1891 to have stained glass and bricks from the
old Star Chamber at Westminster. (fn. 41) It stands on
the south of Hampton Road and now belongs to
the National Physical Laboratory, but does not apparently contain any old stained glass. Gomer House
was built about 1858 by the novelist R. D. Blackmore. (fn. 42) By this time the railway had reached Twickenham and Kingston and there were omnibuses to
London. (fn. 43) The slight middle-class development
which resulted was soon swamped by the building
which followed the opening of the two railway lines
through Teddington itself. The branch of the London & South-Western Railway from Twickenham to
Kingston, on which Teddington Station stands, was
opened in 1863, and the Thames Valley Railway,
with a station at Fulwell, in 1864. (fn. 44) Both lines are
now part of the Southern Region. A few years before
the railway opened the large estate of the lord of the
manor had come into the market, (fn. 45) and by 1871 the
parish contained 1,034 houses, in contrast to 254 ten
years earlier. (fn. 46) West of the station appeared what
was called Upper Teddington, with small terraced
houses stretching between Stanley Road and Waldegrave Road, and the new cemetery (opened 1878) in
the north. Broad Street became a new shopping
centre with 'shops of a more showy description than
those of the mother village', (fn. 47) the new Clarence
Hotel was built in 1863, (fn. 48) St. Peter's Church in
1865-73, (fn. 49) the old cottage hospital in Elfin Grove in
1875, (fn. 50) and the Town Hall at the corner of the Causeway and Middle Lane in 1886. This last was privately
owned and had a ballroom and a theatre as well as
the local board of health offices. (fn. 51) It was burned
down in 1903. (fn. 52) North of the High Street, where
Manor Road had been laid out in 1861, (fn. 53) houses
appeared quickly but were more widely spaced, and
except for the area just east of the station there was
little building south of the High Street. (fn. 54) Towards
the river, St. Alban's confronted the old parish
church in 1889 (fn. 55) and by the end of the century villas
stretched more or less continuously along the riverside. South of Fulwell Station terraces and semidetached houses appeared, adjoining the slightly
earlier settlement of New Hampton outside the
parish. (fn. 56) In the south near Hampton Wick there
were no buildings at all before the gas-works in Sandy
Lane were opened in 1851. (fn. 57) After 1864 (fn. 58) a settlement grew so quickly nearby that by 1868 it had been
given the name of New Found Out: (fn. 59) it later became
called South Teddington. An Anglican school-church
was provided in 1867 and a Roman Catholic one in
1884. (fn. 60) By the end of the century the district was
covered with houses south of Bushy Park Road, with
scattered ones reaching north along the Kingston
Road. (fn. 61) Normansfield private asylum for the feebleminded (now under the National Health Service) in
the Kingston Road was opened in 1868 and had well
over a hundred patients by 1881. In 1957 it had
about 200. (fn. 62)
The pace of building rather slowed down in the
seventies, later increasing again so that about a thousand new houses were built in each decade from 1891
to 1911. (fn. 63) In 1886 a private omnibus service to
Hampton Court was started, which was taken over
by the London Suburban Omnibus Company in
1895. (fn. 64) In 1903 the London United Tramways began
a service along Wellington Road and another along
Stanley Road, Broad Street, the High Street, and the
Kingston Road. (fn. 65) By 1936 the trams had been superseded by trolleybuses and the tram-depot north of
Fulwell Station is now used as a trolleybus garage. (fn. 66)
There were also motor buses by 1914. (fn. 67) The tram
service was said in 1910 to have reduced the attraction of the larger villas which had been built forty
years or so earlier, (fn. 68) but it accelerated building
around the Kingston Road, where there had been
comparatively little before, and by the First World
War most of the present streets were in existence, (fn. 69) and the remaining open spaces were being
given over to other uses. The whole area west of
Wellington Road, with the exception of the small
north-west corner across Staines Road, became the
Fulwell Golf Course in 1904, (fn. 70) and between the two
wars sports grounds were opened on the former
Udney farm land. These are now St. Mary's Hospital Medical School Athletic Ground (c. 14 a.) and
the Harlequins Sports Ground (c. 9 a.). The Lensbury
Club in Broom Road, belonging to the Royal Dutch
Shell Group, was built in 1938 and has large grounds
on both sides of Broom Road. The local authority
also opened several much smaller recreation grounds,
and, in 1931, a swimming-bath in Vicarage Road. (fn. 71)
The National Physical Laboratory at Bushy House
has also gradually extended its buildings farther into
Teddington since it was established in 1902. (fn. 72) By
1957 its grounds reached up to the Hampton Road,
Coleshill Road, and Queens Road. Most of the houses
built more recently in Teddington have filled gaps
between existing streets and buildings: one of the
chief characteristics of the district is the mixture
almost everywhere of buildings of various dates and
types, from the yellow brick cottages of the early
19th century onward. Parts of the High Street and
Broad Street have received a facing of 20th-century
shop fronts, and the Savoy Cinema, built in the later
1930's, replaced a smaller cinema on the same site. (fn. 73)
A series of fêtes, commemorated by magazines in
which memories of Teddington in the past are recorded, heralded the building of the War Memorial
Hospital. (fn. 74) The first part of the building was opened
in 1929 and the old hospital in Elfin Grove was closed
and pulled down. (fn. 75) Among the chief areas of building since the First World War were the council
estates of 124 houses at Udney Park, 78 houses at
Mays estate, and 72 houses at Shacklegate Lane
(built respectively in 1921, 1920-1, 1930), (fn. 76) and the
private estates on the site of Teddington Grove
(1929-30), and in the extreme north-west of the
parish round Rivermeads Avenue (c. 1933-4). (fn. 77)
Between 1937 and 1957 Twickenham Borough
Council built about 40 houses and flats. (fn. 78)
The 'Royal Oak' and the 'King's Head,' in the
High Street, which were in existence by 1730, (fn. 79) are
the oldest surviving inns, but neither of them has an
old building. Other short-lived 18th-century inns
were the 'Greyhound' and the 'Three Bells'. (fn. 80) The
'Guildford Arms', which soon became the 'Clarence
Arms' and was later rebuilt as the Clarence Hotel,
was there by 1795, and the 'Duke of Wellington' by
1820. (fn. 81) The Anglers' Tavern, now the Anglers'
Hotel, appeared about the middle of the century and
soon after the inns multiplied with the quick growth
of population. (fn. 82) By 1911 there were 24 inns, public
houses, and hotels. (fn. 83)
Teddington has had a number of notable residents.
Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Sir Charles Duncombe,
John Walter, and R. D. Blackmore, who all built
houses in the village, have been mentioned above, (fn. 84)
and Bridgeman's domestic chaplain, the poet Thomas
Traherne, is mentioned below. (fn. 85) Stephen Hales (d.
1761) was pre-eminent among the curates and vicars
of note. (fn. 86) Thomas Sackville, Earl of Dorset (d. 1608),
is said to have lived at the manor, (fn. 87) and the Earl of
Leicester dated a letter to the queen from Teddington about 1570. (fn. 88) Many sovereigns must have passed
through the village going to and from Hampton
Court and Charles II is recorded as visiting the
Marquess of Winchester, who apparently had a
house here, on his way from Windsor in 1679. (fn. 89)
Frederick, Prince of Wales, is said to have liked surprising Hales in his study, (fn. 90) and the visitors to
Robert Udney's collection of paintings included
George III and his family, and Horace Walpole from
Twickenham. (fn. 91) William IV as Duke of Clarence
lived nearby at Bushy House and he and Queen
Adelaide were benefactors of the church and school. (fn. 92)
Alexander Herzen, the Russian liberal exile, occupied
Elmfield House from 1863 to 1864, (fn. 93) and was visited
there by Garibaldi. (fn. 94) Other persons connected with
Teddington include Thomas Blagrove (d. 1688),
musician, who had a house and lands there at his
death, (fn. 95) William Penn the Quaker, who dated his
denial that he was a papist there in 1688, (fn. 96) Peg
Woffington (d. 1760), the actress, who retired there
in 1757, Luffman Atterbury (d. 1796), carpenter and
musician, who lived there for some years, and G. M.
Whipple (1842-93), physicist, who was born there.
Several of the foregoing were buried in the church
and churchyard. Among others buried there were
Henry Flitcroft (1697-1769), architect, and Paul
Whitehead (1710-74), satirist. (fn. 97)