The Vale of Health.
East of the road across the
heath to Spaniard's was an area of bog (fn. 90) called
Gangmoor, described towards the end of her life by
the sculptor Joseph Nollekens's wife (d. 1817) as 'a
stagnate bottom, a pit in the heath'. (fn. 91) There Samuel
Hatch, a harness maker presented for building a
shop on the highway at Jack Straw's Castle and
dumping his hides, built a workshop and in 1714
was granted a piece of waste. (fn. 92) By 1720 he had a cottage at what was subsequently called Hatch's or
Hatchett's Bottom. (fn. 93) In 1762 a single enclosure,
approached by an unfenced track from Heath Street,
contained a barn, stable, and cowshed, for which
ground rent was payable to the lord of the manor,
and possibly a cottage next to a small pond, which
may have been Hatch's cottage and was not listed as
copyhold. (fn. 94) In 1777 the Hampstead Water Co. enlarged the pond and drained the marshy ground, and
three cottages were built there for the poor in 1779, (fn. 95)
to replace those which passed into private ownership
at the increasingly fashionable Littleworth. Thomas
Naylor, the occupier of the enclosure of 1762, had
tan pits at Hatch's Bottom in 1777. (fn. 96) The enclosure,
which was leased by the lord of the manor like
demesne, had by 1808 become the site of a varnish
factory. (fn. 97) A chimneysweep had by then built a cottage adjoining it to the north, possibly Chestnut
Cottage, which was later rented from the lord by
a chimneysweep. (fn. 98) The place was also used for
laundering and in 1839 the Vale had the highest
number of clothes posts in the parish. (fn. 99)
The name the Vale of Health, recorded in 1801,
may have originated as a euphemism which was
exploited or as a new name invented in a deliberate
attempt to change the image of the place. Such an
attempt might have been made by John Rudd, a
builder, who acquired most of the grants of waste
made during the later 18th century and probably
built the seven houses and two cottages which were
sold at his death in 1801. (fn. 1) The enclosure recorded in
1762 was subleased in 1808 to William Woods, a
carpenter, who had built two cottages there by
1810. (fn. 2) The middle-class element became increasingly important from the early 19th century. In 1801
the attractions of the area included 'unbounded
prospects' of Kent and the river Thames, and screening, presumably by trees and the lie of the land, from
north winds. (fn. 3) By 1821 the inhabitants, petitioning
for the removal of the poor houses, observed that the
neighbourhood had 'greatly increased in respectability' through the 'improvement of property'. (fn. 4) Sir
Samuel Romilly (1757-1818), the law reformer, retired to a cottage in the Vale. (fn. 5) In 1815 James Leigh
Hunt (1784-1859), on his release from prison for
libelling the Prince Regent, went to live in the Vale
where he stayed until 1819, returning again for a
brief period in 1820-1. His home became the centre
for most of the leading literary figures of the day, including Byron and Shelley, who were supposed to
have shared a cottage there, where they inscribed
lines on a window. (fn. 6) The Vale, with its modest but
picturesque cottages surrounded by the heath, was
the perfect setting for the romantic poets, and Hunt's
circle was important in establishing the literary and
politically radical tradition later associated with
Hampstead. (fn. 7) During the period 1825-32 the poets
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and George Crabbe visited
the Vale and the publisher Charles Knight (1791-
1873) lived there 1830-5, as from 1831 did his friend
Matthew Davenport Hill (1792-1872), lawyer and
radical M.P. and brother of Rowland. Knight and
Hill together established the Penny Magazine in
1832 and formed the Society for the Diffusion of
Useful Knowledge. (fn. 8) Prince Esterhazy was said to
have taken a house in the Vale in 1840. (fn. 9)
The hamlet grew from 4 houses and 10 cottages
in 1815 (fn. 10) to 18 houses in 1851, of which 5 were
larger houses. In 1841 the population of 112 included 5 gentry and 26 domestic servants. The
population dropped to 87 in 1851 possibly because
some of the larger houses were used as country retreats: several were empty or occupied only by caretakers. Although described in 1852 as a 'range of
indifferently white-washed cottages . . . relieved by
clothes-props and lines', the Vale became increasingly desirable, both for permanent residents and
visitors, especially after the opening of the Hampstead Junction Railway in 1860. (fn. 11)
Several cottages at the northern end of the Vale
have been claimed as Hunt's home, which cannot be
certainly identified and was probably one of the
northern group of 2 houses and 10 cottages which
had belonged to Rudd, passed to the Munyard
family, and was enfranchised in 1860 when it included Vale Lodge and House, Woodbine, Pavilion,
and Rose cottages, and four cottages which had been
turned into tea rooms. Helen, countess of Dufferin
(1807-67), a granddaughter of Richard Sheridan and
herself a poet, lived in Pavilion Cottage at some time
between 1848 and 1860. Although the Munyards
retained the ownership of nine houses in the Vale in
the 1890s, Thomas Munyard lived in Munich and
Henry Milton, who was his tenant in 1860, may have
been responsible for building on the estate. Milton
(d. 1883), described as a carpenter in 1851, 'proprietor of houses' in 1861, and retired builder by
1871, owned 8 houses in 1861 and 15 in 1881. (fn. 12)
To the south-west four pieces of waste, granted
between 1791 and 1807, had been acquired by
Donald Nicoll (d. 1872) who obtained their enfranchisement in 1858. (fn. 13) In 1856 Nicoll bought the
freehold site, where the parish poorhouses had
stood, probably nearby. The existing buildings were
demolished and nos. 1-6 Heath Villas built in 1862
by Culverhouse with high Gothic gables; farther
east the Suburban hotel (also called the Vale of
Health tavern) with towers and battlements and
accommodation for 2,000 was built in 1863, nos. 7-
12 Heath Villas by 1868, and the Hampstead Heath
hotel, between the two groups of villas, by 1869.
Separating the new buildings from the pond to the
east were grottos and arbours which, like the tea
gardens, boats and fairground, provided for the
crowds of summer visitors. (fn. 14)
The buildings called the Villas on the Heath were
built at the southern end of the Munyard estate during the 1860s. George Samuel Jealous lived at no. 1
by 1869: a radical, with interests in the co-operative
movement, temperance, vegetarianism, ragged
schools, and the Peace Society, he acquired the
Hampstead and Highgate Express and is credited with
stimulating the interest of the Harmsworth family in
printing. Alfred Harmsworth, a lawyer, went to live
in Rose Cottage in 1870 with his three sons Alfred,
later Viscount Northcliffe, Harold, later Viscount
Rothermere, and Cecil, later Baron Harmsworth (d.
1948). In 1893 Ernest Rhys, editor of Everyman's
Library, rented Rose Cottage, which in 1895 he renamed Hunt Cottage, believing it to have been
Leigh Hunt's house. (fn. 15)
A few houses were built to the west and south in
1870 but building on the waste ended in 1872 when
the M.B.W. bought the heath. Copyholders and
freeholders could still build on their estates, so the
Vale grew within the existing confines. (fn. 16) Between
1875 and 1887 the 19 houses built (fn. 17) included nos.
1-6 the Gables in the north in 1883 and Hollycot in
the south, one of the last built; from 1906 to 1913
J. L. Hammond (1872-1949) and his wife Barbara,
the social historians, lived at Hollycot. By 1890 there
were 53 houses in the Vale. (fn. 18)
The two hotels failed as speculative ventures. The
large Vale of Health tavern, originally intended as a
hotel and sanatorium, was sold in 1876, became
associated with the fair, was let as flats, and c. 1900
became a hotel again on a smaller scale, with the
upper rooms let as studios. In 1877 the smaller
Hampstead Heath hotel passed to Henry Braun, who
opened it as the Athenaeum club, the members including many foreigners and political radicals. In
1882 the upper half of the building was let to the
Salvation Army and in 1883 there were complaints
about the noise and ugliness of the Vale, a compound
of the swings and roundabouts, accompanied presumably by quantities of drink, with Salvation Army
processions. Another hotel was opened next to the
Athenaeum in the late 1880s but it had closed by
1903 and was replaced by Byron Villas. The
Athenaeum, which had become an Anglo-German
club by 1908, closed in 1914 and was used as a
factory. (fn. 19)
Although the Vale of Health was described in 1911
as vulgarized by its tavern, tea gardens, merry-gorounds, and slot machines, (fn. 20) it continued to attract
distinguished inhabitants. Rabindranath Tagore
(1861-1941), the Indian poet and mystic, lived at
no. 3 Villas on the Heath in 1912, the author D. H.
Lawrence (1885-1930) and his wife Frieda at no. 1
Byron Villas in 1915, Cyril Joad, the philosopher
and broadcaster, at no. 4 the Gables in 1923-4, and
the writers Edgar Wallace (d. 1932) at Vale Lodge,
John Middleton Murry at no. 1A the Gables in
1926, and Stella Gibbons at Vale Cottage in 1927-
30. Sir Compton Mackenzie (1883-1972), who lived
at Woodbine Cottage from 1937 to 1943, summed up
the attraction of the Vale for writers: 'village life half
an hour from Piccadilly Circus was a continuous
refreshment and stimulus'. The artist Sir Muirhead
Bone (1876-1953) lived at no. 1 the Gables in 1907
and among others who used the studios in the Vale
of Health hotel were Henry Lamb, who painted his
portrait of Lytton Strachey there in 1912, Stanley
Spencer from 1914 to 1927, and Sir William Coldstream in the 1930s. (fn. 21)
The Vale of Health studios closed in 1939. (fn. 22) Inhabitants since the Second World War include
Norman Bentwich (1883-1971), the exponent of
Jewish ideals, and his wife Helen (d. 1972), chairman
of the L.C.C. and the Vale's historian, who lived in
Hollycot from 1931, Sir Leon Bagrit (1902-79), the
Russian-born industrialist, and Sir Paul Chambers
(1904-81), the banker, at Vale Lodge in the 1950s,
and Alfred Brendel, the pianist, at North Villa in the
1970s. (fn. 23) Since 1945 the Vale has changed less than
any other district in Hampstead. Luxury flats (the
Athenaeum) replaced the old Athenaeum in 1958
and Spencer House (flats) replaced the Vale of
Health hotel in 1964. (fn. 24) The changes did not alter the
generally village-like atmosphere of the Vale, with its
narrow streets, isolated on the heath. Listed buildings included the early 19th-century group from
Rudd's estate, Vale House, Cottage, and Lodge,
North and South Villas, Hunt Cottage, and the
weatherboarded (possibly 18th-century) Woodbine
and Old cottages; Chestnut Cottage to the west,
from before 1812, with the Vivary and Lavender
cottages opposite, which were probably built either
in 1845 by William Hooper or in 1846 by H. Hill;
the Villas on the Heath, dating from the 1860s, and
Byron Villas, from 1903. (fn. 25)