PETERSHAM
The modern parish of Petersham is included in the
borough of Richmond, and the village, which comprises a large number of good old-fashioned houses, is
in fact a pleasant suburb of Richmond. It is between
the Thames and the higher part of Richmond Park,
which shelters it from the east.
By the 'Richmond, Petersham, and Ham Open
Spaces Act, 1902,' Petersham Common and certain
meadows and manorial rights in the same were
vested in the Richmond Corporation for purposes of
public enjoyment. The Lammas lands on the
manor were also, by the same Act, taken from the
commoners who had enjoyed rights of pasture, and,
with Petersham Common, were placed under a Board
of Conservators. The river-side, from Petersham to
Kingston, has also been put under the Richmond
Corporation and the Surrey County Council, in two
sections, for enjoyment by the public for ever.
The chief interest of Petersham lies in its old
houses, some of which are historically famous.
Ham House, the seat of the Earls of Dysart,
was built by Sir Thomas Vavasour, Knight-Marshal
to James I, traditionally for
Henry Prince of Wales. The
date 1610, the words Vivat
Rex, and the initials T. V. over
the door, probably relate to its
completion. Owing possibly
to the death of the prince it
was conveyed to the Earl of
Holderness, from whom it
seems to have passed to the
Murray family. It is mentioned in the Court Rolls of
the manor of Petersham in
1634 as a house lately built on
customary land by Sir Thomas Vavasour, and surrendered by Robert Lewis (probably a trustee), who
was then holding it, to the use of Katherine Murray
wife of William Murray. (fn. 1) This was by way of a
marriage settlement on the marriage of Elizabeth
daughter of William and Katherine with Sir Lionel
Tollemache. The heir-general of the Ramsay family,
Earls of Holderness, afterwards surrendered all
claim in the court baron. (fn. 2) Ham House then
followed the descent of the manor of Petersham
(q.v.). After the Earl (later Duke) of Lauderdale
had married Elizabeth, Countess of Dysart, meetings
of the Cabal ministry are said to have been held in
the room still called the Cabal Room. (fn. 3) Another
name for it is the Queen's room, owing to a tradition
that it was fitted up for Catherine of Braganza. In
1688 when William of Orange wished James II to
remove from Whitehall he suggested Ham House as
his abode ; James objected to it as 'a very ill winter
house, damp and unfurnished,' and preferred to stay
at Rochester, whence he escaped to France. (fn. 4)

Tollemache, Earl of Dysart. Argent a fret sable.
During the life of the Duches of Lauderdale the
place was considered one of the finest near London.
Evelyn wrote of it as 'inferior to few of the best
villas of Italy itself ; the house furnished like a great
prince's ; the parterres, flower gardens, orangeries,
groves, avenues, courts, statues, perspectives, fountains,
aviaries, and all this at the banks of the sweetest river
in the world, must needs be admirable.' (fn. 5) After the
death of the duchess in 1698 the place was neglected.
The excuse of James II that it was in 1688 ' unfurnished' was scarcely true, for much of the furniture
now is of the reign of Charles II, and peculiarly
magnificent. But the surroundings of the house
were possibly then neglected. When Horace Walpole's niece Charlotte was married to the fifth earl,
her uncle wrote, 'I went yesterday to see my niece
in her new principality of Ham. It delighted me,
and made me peevish. Close to the Thames,
in the centre of all rich and verdant beauty,
it is so blocked up and barricaded with walls, vast
trees, and gates, that you think yourself an hundred
miles off, and an hundred years back. The old
furniture is so magnificently ancient, dreary, and
decayed, that at every step one's spirits sink, and all
my passion for antiquity could not keep them up.
Every minute I expected to see ghosts sweeping by,
ghosts I would not give sixpence to see, Lauderdales,
Tollemaches, Maitlands.' Horace Walpole clearly
preferred the sham antiquity of Strawberry Hill to
the genuine antique. The situation of the house is
low-lying; the house stands some way back from the
river bank, from which it is screened by a row of
elms and other trees.
The original building, erected by Sir Thomas
Vavasour in 1610, was of an H-shaped plan, the main
portion being about 65 ft. long by 21 ft. broad, and
each wing about 74 ft. by 17 ft. The house remained
practically unchanged until it came into the possession
of the Countess of Dysart and Duchess of Lauderdale,
who enlarged it considerably and re-arranged the rooms.
The first addition appears to have been the erection
of the projecting stair-hall in the east wing with the
insertion of the carved staircase. The windows in
this stair-hall, and the whole outward appearance of
it (excepting the rusticated stone quoins at the angles),
tally with the style of the original building. After this
a great increase was made by the filling in of the space
between the wings on the south side, and by the
erection of smaller wings against the east and west
ends with a frontage to the south. The length of
the east face of the south-east wing was ruled by the
pre-existing stair-hall, but the south-west wing was
made larger to include a secondary stair-hall. The
date of this work is uncertain, but it was probably
finished by 1680.

Ham House: North Front
The bays on the north ends of the two old wings
are obviously of a later date, apparently 18th-century
work. The building underwent a complete restoration in 1887; the arches to the porticoes in the two
inner angles on the north side have been completely
renewed.
The building is of three stories with basement and
attics, and is built of red brick throughout with stone
or cement dressings. The oldest portion has narrow
bricks laid in English bond (alternate courses of
headers and stretchers), and so also has the large stairhall, which is built with unusually thin walls; in
these parts the dressings and string-courses are of
stone. The windows on the ground floor (north
face) have moulded jambs, mullions, and transoms, and
are of two lights with rectangular lead glazing; the
first-floor windows were like them, but have lost their
mullions below the transom; the second-floor windows are for the most part perfect, like those in the
ground story. The main entrance is in the middle
of this face; it is flanked by grey marble pillars on
square pedestals relieved with oval bosses in strap-work
panels, and with Tuscan capitals enriched with egg-and-dart ornament, supporting an entablature with a
frieze of triglyphs and lozenges, and a moulded
cornice. The doorway proper has a round arch
decorated with rosettes alternating with a nail-head
ornament; in the crown of the arch is a keystone and
ogee-shaped bracket. The spandrels are filled in with
ornament in low relief inclosing shields, that in the
east spandrel has the Tollemache crest of a winged
demi-horse, the other has the arms of Tollemache
quartering Murray; the spandrels are surrounded by
a band with rose and nail-head ornament. The wood
door has a carved and fluted head, below which is
the inscription '1610 VIVAT REX.' The porticoes
in the angles formed by the north front with the
wings have single arches to the north, and two facing
inwards, and their back walls are plastered and
painted with landscapes. All around the three sides of
this front towards the court are oval niches with busts
of Roman emperors, &c., and two in the west wing
are of Charles I and Charles II. The 18th-century
bays in the ends of the wings have plain brick windows
with wood sashes, and the bays are not relieved with
string-courses like the main house. The walls of the
older portion are finished with a moulded cornice
with plain modillions running right round the front
and either wing until it meets the later work on the
east and west. The windows of the projecting stairhall are similar to those on the north front, while
those of the small added wing are like those on the
south front. In the old wings are bay windows,
which appear to be as old as the wings themselves, but
are modernized in the lower part; the windows in
them have plain Portland stone jambs and wooden
sashes. The bays stop at the level of the second floor
with a balustraded parapet, the second-floor windows
overlooking them having round-headed middle lights
and square side lights under a pediment; they are
evidently later than the walls in which they are set.
The eaves cornice of all the later work is much more
elaborate than the other, being enriched by egg-an-ddart ornament and rosettes on the soffit.
The west face agrees with the south face in its
southern half; at the north end of the south-west
wing is a doorway admitting to the library staircase.
The older wing on the north half of this front has a
very large chimney-stack, which serves the kitchen
fireplace and those over it. The roofs of the house
are covered with slates. The main entrance in the
middle of the north front opens directly into the
north-west corner of the 'Marble Hall,' a fine room
42 ft. by 21 ft. with a black and white marble floor
and a slightly raised platform at the east end,
which is of wood parquetry. It is lighted by
three north windows and has a fireplace of black
marble with gilded swags in the lintel, and a
white marble shelf on ogee brackets. The walls
are panelled in wood painted green and gold,
and there are doorways on the south to the diningroom and the passage next to the 'green drawing
room,' and on the west to the long passage traversing
the west half of the house, while an archway in the
east wall gives access to the main staircase. The
hall, originally of one story, was opened in the 18th
century to the second floor, with a gallery running all
round at the old first-floor level. The newels of the
staircase are square with carved panels in their sides,
and heads carved as wicker baskets filled with fruit
and flowers, and the balustrades and wall panels are
divided into bays filled with trophies of arms. The
stair ascends from the ground to the second floor, the
doorways opening on to it having classical busts set
in broken pediments over them.
The ground-floor room of the east wing is occupied
by the chapel, which is fitted with 18th-century wood
panelling and seats, and has an altar table at the north
end in the recess formed by the bay; the lights of
the bay are, however, closed by the oak panelling, as
are the lower halves of the side windows. The
ceiling is plastered and has a wood cornice. The
space west of the marble hall and north of the passage
to the west door is now occupied by offices, and the
north end of the west wing contains two apartments
lined with oak panelling which were formerly the stillroom and the housekeeper's room. The dining-room
is entered from the south-west corner of the marble
hall, the doorway being in the middle of its north
wall and fitted with a two-leaved door; on either
side of it in the same wall are recesses matching
the doorway; all with carved architraves. This wall
is very thick, consisting of a later wall built against an
earlier one. The room is lighted through the south
wall by two windows and a middle doorway opening
out on to the south terrace; the fireplace in the east
wall is a square opening with moulded blue-veined
white marble jambs and lintel. The ceiling is plain
and has a moulded cornice with a laurel-leaf frieze.
The Red Room is a smaller apartment east of the
dining-room, from which it is entered. The fireplace
in its north wall is of a red marble. The ceiling is
plain with the laurel-leaf cornice. A door in the
north wall opens into a small stair-hall, formerly
called the Volary Room, between this room and the
marble hall. The Green Room is next, east of the
Red Room, and occupies the south end of the original
east wing. It is lighted by a bay window and has a
marble fireplace with an old fireback in its east walls
and is lined with white and gold raised panelling over
which are hung tapestries representing the Flight of
Pyrrhus and other subjects; the ceiling is plain. To
the north of the room is a narrow passage with a
stair at its end. The later south-east small wing is
divided into two rooms; the 'card room' is entered
from the Green Room; it has a corner fireplace of
marble and is panelled in white and gold; the ceiling
is coved and painted by Verrio. The other room,
north of the card room, is the china closet, filled with
valuable old china; this also has a corner fireplace
and a painted ceiling. Next to it is a very small
staircase to the first floor, approached from the china
closet and from the narrow passage next the Green
Room which communicates with the marble
hall, &c. Lord Dysart's study is west of the diningroom, and to the north of it is a small staircase.
Lord Dysart's bedroom (formerly the Duchess of
Lauderdale's bedroom) lies west of the study and
occupies the south end of the old west wing; it is
lighted by a bay window, has a square fireplace of
black white-veined marble in its west wall, and on
the north side an alcove, the ceiling of which is painted
with allegorical figures, flowers, and festoons in an oval
panel in which also are the initials E.D.L. The
room is lined with brown and gold bolection moulded
panelling. Beyond is the Duchess of Lauderdale's
dressing-room. The later small west wing contains the
valet's room, lavatory, &c. The staircase in the
north end of this wing has a moulded oak handrail
and turned balusters. A doorway on the first floor
opens from this stair-hall into the library (over the
valet's room, &c.), which has an ornamental plastered
ceiling. It contains many valuable MSS, and books,
including no less than fourteen Caxtons. In the
same wing to the south is a smaller room through
which entrance may be gained into the long gallery
which fills the whole of the old west wing and is
some 73 ft. 6 in. long with a bay window at each
end. The walls are panelled and divided into bays
by fluted pilasters with Ionic capitals; the cornice
with the laurel frieze is painted brown and gold; the
ceiling is plain.
A doorway in the middle of the gallery gives
access to the north drawing-room, which is lighted
by two windows in the north side and has a white
marble fireplace in the south wall; the walls are
panelled in white and gold, over which are Mortlake
tapestries representing scenes of husbandry, &c.; the
ceiling is panelled, the main ribs being enriched with
festoons, &c. Next, east of this, is the round gallery
or upper part of the marble hall; the gallery, which
is octagonal in plan, runs all round the hall, being
narrow at the sides and wider at the ends; the
ceiling is an enriched one with a large oval centrepiece with fruit and flowers. Also opening out of
the north drawing-room is the Miniature Room over
the north-west portico; this room has a painted
ceiling by Verrio.

Ham House: South Front
The room over the other portico is a dressing-room
communicating with the 'Feathers' or 'Prince of
Wales's' bedroom in the north end of the west
wing, so called because it formerly had the Prince
of Wales's feathers above the fireplace and over the
bed. The dressing-room has a stone fireplace
with a carved lintel and a shield in the middle. The
bedroom has a large plain dark grey marble fireplace,
and is lighted by a bay window. The round gallery
and the 'feathers' bedroom can both be entered from
the grand stair-hall. South of the stair-hall is the 'Yellow satin bedroom,' which, as its name implies, is hung
with yellow satin brocade; the fireplace is of yellowveined grey marble and has a white marble keystone;
the cornice has a deep carved Jacobean frieze, original
with the first building; the room is lighted by a bay
window. The dressing-room in the later small
east wing (east of the bedroom) has an earlier stone
fireplace with a four-centred Tudor arch with shields
in the spandrels and a carved lintel. The room is
lined with painted oak panelling with bolection
moulds, and has a plain cornice and ceiling. The
small room next to it, over the china closet, has similar
brown panelling and a red marble fireplace.
The yellow satin room opens into the small staircase west of it, from which admittance is gained to
a small room (with the laurel-frieze cornice), whence
is entered the Queen's audience closet. Adjoining
it is another small room, richly decorated and with
an arched recess at its end containing a tapestry with
the arms of the Duke of Lauderdale and having a
painted ceiling representing the Rape of Ganymede;
the fireplace of this room is of scagliola work,
forming a foliage design in the lintel and twisted
pillars in the jambs and with the initials E.D.L.;
the floor is of inlaid parquetry like the Cabal Room, the
window ledge is inlaid marble like the fireplace;
opposite the fireplace is a tapestry similar to that in the
recess. The Cabal Room, next west, is a large room
hung with Mortlake tapestries of the four seasons;
the floor is of oak parquetry of plain basket pattern
for the greater part, but for a space of 9 ft. 6 in.
across the east end of a much more elaborate design
in which the monogram E.D.L. again occurs; the
dado is of white and gold with egg-and-tongue
enrichment. The fireplace is of red marble, and the
picture frame over it has gilded festoons about it;
the plaster ceiling is ornamented in high relief, the
main ribs and the cornice having a laurel-leaf enrichment. The 'Blue and Silver Room' lies between
the Cabal Room and the long gallery, and is lined with
blue and silver striped tapestry; it has a green and
white marble fireplace and an enriched ceiling. The
floor is of the basket pattern parquetry. The upper
floors of the house are occupied by the bedchambers,
&c. The kitchen, servants' rooms, and offices are for
the greater part in the basement. An adequate
description of the wonderful collection of furniture,
china, &c, of which the house is literally full, would
far exceed the limits of space here available.
The gardens and terraces are well laid out. In
the forecourt inclosed by the north wings are two
terrace walks, one above the other, with flights of
stone steps leading up to the main doorway. The
drive before these terraces is inclosed by side walls
brought out with a curved sweep from the wings;
in these walls are niches containing busts of Roman
emperors, &c., like those in the front of the house.
In the middle of the courtyard is a recumbent
statue of a river deity representing the Thames. The
front of the courtyard (towards the river) is closed
by an iron railing with large iron gates. On the
south side is a long gravel terrace raised some feet
above the large grass lawn; on the other side of the
lawn are some ancient Scotch fir-trees said to be
the first planted in England, and beyond them an
entrance with large iron gates of the late 17th century,
now never opened. The ilex-oak walk west of the
lawn leads through into another inclosed garden
and contains a marble statue of the dancing Bacchus.
The kitchen gardens lie to the south and west of this
court. North of it are the former orangery buildings,
now used as a laundry. The kitchen court is on
the west side of the building, having various outbuildings about it, and leading from it; farther west
past the laundry is the drive from the road through
the stables, which were rebuilt at the end of the
18th century with some of the old material.
In a document dated 1266 mention is made of an
ancient hamlet called SUDBROOK. (fn. 6) Later in 1550
there is record of a suit as to the ownership of half
a tenement called 'Underhylle' and half a tenement
called 'Sudbrooke.' These premises, which were
copyhold of the manor of Petersham, included a
house and 30 acres of land, meadow, and pasture in
Petersham. (fn. 7) At a court held in 1637 a customary
cottage in Sudbrook, with a parcel of pasture and
part of a close, was surrendered by Thomas Cole
and John Yeates to the use of John Hewson and
William Bell in payment of certain sums to the poor
of Petersham, Ham, and West Sheen. (fn. 8)
The present house, known as Sudbrook Lodge,
with its surrounding park, was the residence of
John, Duke of Argyll and Greenwich, who died there
in 1743. (fn. 9) His mother was Elizabeth, elder daughter
of Sir Lionel Tollemache and the Countess of Dysart,
and he was born at Ham House. From him it passed
to his eldest daughter and co-heir Caroline, created
in 1767 Baroness of Greenwich, who married first
Francis Scott, Earl of Dalkeith, eldest son and heir
apparent of Francis, second Duke of Buccleuch. Lord
Dalkeith died in April 1750, before his father, and
at his wife's death in 1794 Sudbrook descended to
their son Henry, third Duke of Buccleuch. He sold
the property to Sir Robert Horton, who sold it to
the Crown. The house is now occupied by the
Richmond Golf Club. It was erected early in the
18th century, and consists of two square wings connected by a large central hall, on either side of
which was a portico with Corinthian columns and
balustraded parapet. The south portico was closed
in later with brick walls built between the columns,
and now serves as a smoking-room. The hall
(now the dining-room) extends the height of two
stories; it has a marble fireplace with a bevelled
mirror, over which are the Duke of Argyll's arms.
The walls are divided into panels by fluted Corinthian pilasters with a rich cornice, over which is a
cove with circular lights and panels. The doorheads
in the hall are carved with trophies of arms. The
doorways in the later hall to the north of the large
hall also have carved architraves and heads. There
are stairs at both ends of the building with twisted
balusters, &c. A double flight of stone steps leads
up to both main entrances. A later wing, connected
to the main house by a long narrow passage, extends
to the northwards, east of it.
Another once-famous mansion in Petersham was
that known as PETERSHAM LODGE, which was
purchased by Charles I of Gregory Cole. (fn. 10) In 1660
Charles II granted the office of keeper of the house or
lodge and the walk at Petersham, within the Great
Park near Richmond, to Ludowick and John Carlisle, (fn. 11)
who in 1662–3 surrendered their right in the same
to Thomas Panton and Bernard Grenville; (fn. 12) and in
1671 the same keepership, with an annual pension of
£50, was granted for life to Lord St. John and his
son Charles Paulet. (fn. 13) In 1686 the mansion-house
called Petersham Lodge, with all out-houses, brewhouses, and dove-houses belonging, and the green before
the house in the north-west corner of the New Park,
containing 15 acres and bounded on the east by the
thick covert under the mount called King Henry's
Mount, was granted by James II to his nephew
Viscount Cornbury. (fn. 14) This mansion in 1721, being
then the property of the Earl of Rochester, was entirely
destroyed by fire, the damage being computed at
between £40,000 and £50,000, and including the
destruction of the library of the famous Earl of
Clarendon, (fn. 15) grandfather of the Earl of Rochester.
It was rebuilt by William, Earl of Harrington, (fn. 16)
created in 1742 Viscount Petersham, after a design
of the Earl of Burlington; and is alluded to in the
lines of the poet Thomson:
'The pendent woods that nodding hang o'er
Harrington's retreat.'
In 1783 an Act of Parliament was passed to
enable George III to grant the inheritance of the
capital messuage or mansion-house called Petersham
Lodge to Thomas Pitt, first Baron Camelford, who had
purchased it from Charles, Earl of Harrington, (fn. 17) and
by whom it was sold in 1790 to the Duke of
Clarence, afterwards William IV, who occasionally
lived there. He sold it to Lord Huntingtower, heir
apparent of the Earl of Dysart, who predeceased his
father in 1833. In 1834 it was sold by the executors
of Lord Huntingtower to the Commissioners of Woods
and Forests, by whom it was entirely destroyed and
its grounds incorporated with the park. The site of
the house was close to some cedars on the slope of
the hill.
The present Petersham Lodge, a handsome Georgian
mansion, has no relation to the original house; it is
situated close by the river bank and was purchased in
1902 by Sir Max Waechter to preserve the view from
Richmond Hill, and presented to the Richmond
Corporation, who leased it at a nominal rent to
Queen Mary for a governesses' home.
PETERSHAM HOUSE, next to the church, is a
brick structure dating from about 1680, but with later
fittings. The entrance, hall was decorated by Verrio,
but the painting has been badly restored. The house
contains some good marble fireplaces by the Adams,
one with marble inlay, and some good white marble
reliefs by Flaxman. In the grounds is a curious
narrow bridge of brick.
There are several good 18th-century houses in the
village, such as Douglas House, once the residence
of Lady Caroline Gilt the novelist, who died here
in 1857, and Rutland House. Elm Lodge was a
favourite summer retreat of Charles Dickens, who
there wrote the greater part of Nicholas Nickleby.
At Bute House lived the Earl of Bute, minister
of George III. The estate was bought by the late
Mrs. Warde of Petersham House as a memorial to
her father, in order to preserve the foreground of
the view from Richmond Hill. The house has been
demolished, the foundations alone being left to show
its size and position. There are also several cottages
of an early date, as the Farm Lodge with its shaped
gables.
The Petersham Institute and Church Room, and
the New Church, have been built on the Bute House
Estate.
The Petersham Schools (British) were built by Lord
John Russell in 1842, when he was living at Pembroke Lodge in Richmond Park.
MANOR
The first mention of PETERSHAM
occurs in the alleged grant from Frithwold subregulus of Surrey and Bishop
Erkenwald to Chertsey Abbey, (fn. 18) which included ten
mansae at Petersham. This was confirmed by Athelstan in 933, (fn. 19) by Edgar in 967, (fn. 20) and by Edward the
Confessor in 1062. (fn. 21) At the time of the Domesday
Survey the Abbot of Chertsey held it in demesne for
four hides, though in the time of Edward the Confessor it had been assessed for ten hides. There was
a church and a fishery of 1,000 eels and 1,000 lampreys. (fn. 22) In 1324 the abbot was granted protection
in his manor in Petersham. (fn. 23) In 1415 the Abbot of
Chertsey surrendered this manor to the Crown,
together with the advowson of Ewell, (fn. 24) and the
lordship of Petersham, annexed to the manor of
Sheen (now Richmond), formed part of the jointure
of Elizabeth Woodville, queen of Edward IV, in
1466. (fn. 25) In 1479–80 the manor was held at farm
by Robert Radclyff, (fn. 26) and in 1483–4 by Henry
Dain. (fn. 27) In 1518 the custody of the manor, together
with Ham and Sheen, was leased by the Crown to
Richard Brampton to hold for twenty years at a
rental of £23 6s. 4d., (fn. 28) and this grant having been
cancelled in 1522, the same manors were in that
year leased for thirty years to Massi Villiarde, Serjeant
of the king's pleasure water, and Thomas Brampton, (fn. 29)
the grant being subsequently renewed for forty years
in the name of Sir Nicholas Carew. (fn. 30) In 1541
Henry VIII, on the occasion of his divorce from
Anne of Cleves, granted to the latter the manors of
Sheen, Petersham, and Ham with the Island of
Crowell and Richmond Park to hold for life. (fn. 31) In
1546 Anne granted a lease of these estates at farm to
David Vincent, steward of the king in his privy
chamber, who in the reign of Edward VI made over
the remainder of his interest in the same to Gregory
Lovell, who was holding them in 1564. (fn. 32) In 1607 (fn. 33)
the same estates were granted at farm to Sir Thomas
Gorges, who in 1608 transferred the lease to George
Cole. (fn. 34) In 1610 the manor was granted by James I
to Henry Prince of Wales, (fn. 35) and after his death to
trustees for Prince Charles, (fn. 36) through whom it returned
to the Crown. George Cole,
the lessee, died at Petersham
in 1624, (fn. 37) and in 1629 the
name of his widow, Frances
Cole, appears on the court
rolls as lady of the manor. (fn. 38)
In 1635 the court baron and
view of frankpledge were held
in the name of Gregory Cole,
son of the above, who married Jane daughter of William
Blighe of Botathan, co. Cornwall, (fn. 39) and in this year conceded to his brother Thomas Cole of the parish of
St. Dunstan in the West, London, gentleman, all his
capital messuage in Petersham with dovecotes and all
tenements held by copy of court roll of the manor
of Petersham. (fn. 40) In the next year, however, the court
baron was held in the name of William Murray,
who had received a lease from Queen Henrietta
Maria, to whom Charles I had granted the manor,
and to this court came the above-mentioned Gregory,
Jane, and Thomas, and having been examined alone
and secretly by the steward, surrendered up their
tenancy of the above premises in Petersham. (fn. 41)

Cole. Argent a bull passant sable in a border sable bezanty.
William Murray had been the whipping-boy of
Charles I while Prince of Wales, and continued his
friend and favourite and his faithful supporter in his
later adversities. In 1639, in consideration of the
losses sustained by the inclosure of the New Park, he
petitioned that the lease of the manor of Petersham,
which had been made out for twenty-seven years, might
be exchanged for a grant in perpetuity of the manor. (fn. 42)
This request was acceded to, and in 1643 Murray
was created Earl of Dysart. In the troubles which
followed, however, these estates were sequestered, (fn. 43)
and in 1651 Sir Lionel Tollemache and Elizabeth
his wife—who, with Katherine, Anne, and Margaret
Murray, was one of the four daughters and co-heirs
of William and Katherine Murray—begged allowance
of their title to Ham and Petersham Manors. (fn. 44) After
the Restoration the same ladies were again pleading
for a renewal of the grant of these estates at the same
rental of £16 9s. at which they had been held by
their father, and they pleaded that none had suffered
more in the late times than they, having been twice
plundered, sequestered, and forced to purchase their
lands at an unreasonable rate. (fn. 45) After many renewals
of the same petition, 75 acres of land in the manors
were granted to them in 1665 at a rent of 4d. per
acre, (fn. 46) and in 1666 a lease of the demesne lands,
consisting of 289 acres 27 perches, was bestowed
for a term of sixty-one years upon Sir Robert
Murray, (fn. 47) one of the founders of the Royal Society,
extolled by Burnet as 'the worthiest man of the
age,' (fn. 48) to hold on behalf of the same persons. Sir
Lionel Tollemache died in 1668, and his widow
married John, Earl of Lauderdale, who in 1672
obtained a grant of the manors of Petersham and
Ham in right of his wife for the same rent of £16 9s.,
exception being made, however, of the portion granted
as above to Sir Lionel Tollemache. (fn. 49) The countess
was succeeded by her eldest son Lionel, third Earl
of Dysart, and from this date Petersham remained
with the Earls of Dysart. Lionel, fifth earl, suffered a
recovery of all his estates in Ham and Petersham in
1773, (fn. 50) and, dying without issue in 1799, was succeeded by his brother Wilbraham Tollemache, sixth
earl. (fn. 51) On the death of the latter without issue the
estate was divided, in accordance with a settlement
made by the previous earl, between his sisters, Lady
Louisa Manners, (fn. 52) Lady Frances Tollemache, and Lady
Jane Halliday. (fn. 53) The manors have been held since
1878 by William John Manners, ninth earl, descendant of Lady Louisa Manners, who was herself
Countess of Dysart.
A charter dated 1464 enumerates certain customs
as pertaining to the lordships of West Sheen,
Petersham, and Ham. These include the holding of
an annual court, fines of a minimum of 2d. being
imposed on such as failed to attend. On the death of
a tenant the inheritance passed by the custom of the
manor to his youngest son, or failing such youngest
son to his youngest daughter. The quit-rent of the
land at Petersham was 4d. per acre and 6d. the
houses, and the fine one year's quit-rent. The
charter is attested by five tenants: John Hart,
William Ballet, John Howe, John Brewtell, and
William Thome. (fn. 54) A survey of the manor taken in
1649 gives a list of customs granted to the tenants
of Petersham in 1481 by Edward IV and confirmed
by divers monarchs; namely, that the lord of the
manor might 'sell all wood and waste lands to any
man by copy, paying a fine to the lord and a yearly
quit-rent to the king.' A court baron for the manor
was kept at the will of the lord, and a court leet once
a year. The youngest son and youngest daughter
inherited as above. There was a little common belonging to the manor called Petersham Common on the
west side of Richmond Hill. In a survey taken in
1609 this common is said to contain 200 acres, the
tenants having common of pasture there for their
cattle, and common of estover. (fn. 55)
In the charter granted by James I to Kingston in
1603 it was enacted that the court leet and view of
frankpledge should no longer extend into Petersham,
and in 1609 the king is said to hold a court
leet for Petersham twice yearly, after Easter and
Michaelmas. (fn. 56) Kingston appears subsequently to have
claimed court leet in Petersham, however, for in
1628 the bailiffs and freemen of Kingston were confirmed in their former liberties on condition of
relinquishing their court leet in Richmond, Petersham,
Ham, and Effingham, (fn. 57) and in that year the king
appointed Sir Robert Douglas steward of the court
leet for the manor of Richmond, at which the tenants
of Petersham were to make attendance, the same
court to be held twice a year. (fn. 58) In the survey taken
in 1649 the courts baron and the courts leet were
valued at £35 yearly. (fn. 59)
CHURCH
The church of ST. PETER is of unusual plan, having a chancel 15 ft. 6 in.
by 15 ft., nave 28 ft. 2 in. east to west
by 62 ft. north to south, and west tower 7 ft. square,
with a porch to the west of it and a vestry to the
north.
The church is said to have been built in 1505, but
a blocked 13th-century lancet window in the north
wall of the chancel shows that part at least is of
much older date. Originally, as it seems, a plain
rectangle 15 ft. 6 in. by 43 ft., it was enlarged early
in the 17th century by the addition of a south transept and a west tower of red brick. In 1790 a north
transept was added, more than half as long as the
church and of a depth nearly as great as its width;
the west porch was then added and the upper half
of the tower rebuilt. In 1840 the former south
transept gave way to a very much larger one, the east
wall of which lines with that of the north transept,
while its west wall overlaps the tower. Galleries
were inserted, various alterations being made in the
north transept, which was heightened and had some
of its windows blocked up, and an inclosed staircase
was built against the west wall. The vestry north
of the tower probably dates from 1790.
The chancel is plastered and has diagonal eastern
buttresses; the small blocked lancet in the north wall
is rebated and chamfered, and the east and the south
windows are each of two lights with wood frames.
All the nave windows are round-headed except on
the north, where they have been blocked by the
gallery and replaced with smaller segmental-headed
lights; there was formerly a north doorway in the
middle of the wall. The outer arch of the west porch
is round, but the doorways through the tower are
square-headed. The ceilings are flat and plastered.
The altar-table and font are modern; and a modern
screen spans the entrance to the chancel, within which
are two large box-pews. The nave is also filled with
box-pews, and there are north, west and south galleries.
In the chancel on the north side is a large monument
erected by Gregory Cole in 1624 to his father and
his son, both named George. It formerly stood in
the old south transept, which was probably built to
contain it. The elder George married Frances Preston
and had eight sons and five daughters, and Gregory
married Jane Blighe and had three sons, George,
buried in this tomb, Thomas, and Robert. The
effigies of George and Frances Cole lie under a round
arch flanked by Corinthian columns, and in a small
niche in the base is the figure of their grandson.
Above are the arms of Cole quartering Argent three
bends in a border engrailed gules. In the east spandrel
of the arch are the arms of Preston: Argent two bars
gules and a quarter gules with a cinquefoil or
thereon; and in the west spandrel Preston impaled
by Cole. On the frieze are two other shields, one
with the quartered coat of Cole and the other:
Argent a fesse between two roundels sable in the
chief and a martlet in the foot sable, a molet gules for
difference impaling Cole, which records the marriage
of Henry Lee of London with Elizabeth daughter of
George and Frances Cole. On the south wall is a
monument to Sir Thomas Jenner, kt., justice of the
Common Pleas, 1706–7; and to Elizabeth, Countess
of Dysart and Duchess of Lauderdale, 1697. There
is one bell, by Brian Eldridge, 1620.
The communion plate comprises a silver-gilt cup
of 1562, and silver cup and cover paten of 1570,
two silver-gilt patens of 1663 and 1696, a silver
paten of 1760, and a silver flagon 1740.
The registers begin in 1570, the first book
(without its first leaf, which only survives as a copy)
containing entries from 1574 to 1681, the second
continuing to 1716; the third is a copy of the other
two made in 1698 and continued to 1786 for
baptisms and burials, and 1756 for marriages. In
the third book are entries that the church was
built on the 'south side of the abbey' (i.e. probably a house belonging to Chertsey) in 1505, and
that the 'chapell' was 'new repaired and whitened
and glazed in 1668.' The fourth book has marriages
from 1756 to 1786, and the fifth marriages 1807
to 1812, the register of marriages between 1786
and 1807 appearing to be lost; the sixth has baptisms
from 1786 to 1812, and the seventh burials for the
same period.
In the vestry is a photograph of a certificate, dated
30 July 1664, by Henry Bignell, minister, of the
marriage of Prince Rupert to Lady Francesca Bard;
but the register contains no entry of such marriage.
The church stands to the north of the road below
Richmond Hill, and is approached by a narrow passage.
On a site in the grounds of the former Bute House
is the new church of ALL SAINTS, completed in
1909. It is a red brick and terra-cotta building of
a Romanesque style, consisting of an apsidal chancel,
nave with aisles, octagonal north baptistery, and a tall
south-west tower with a pyramidal roof crowned by a
figure of Christ. The altar is raised to a considerable
height above the floor of the nave, and has a tall reredos and rood, and the baptistery has a tank for total
immersion.
ADVOWSON
A church existed at Petersham at
the time of the Domesday Survey,
and in 1266 was appropriated to
Merton Priory as a chapelry of Kingston. In this
year an assignment was made for the endowment of a
chaplain to celebrate divine service three times a week
in the said chapel, namely, on Sunday, Wednesday,
and Friday, and freely dispense there the sacrament of
baptism, the prior and convent allowing him two
quarters of white wheat, one quarter of barley, and one
of oats, to be paid on the feast of All Saints, and
saving the rights of the mother-church of Kingston;
whilst the parishioners of Petersham conceded, for the
sustentation of the same chaplain, one bushel of wheat
for every 10 acres, the whole amounting to 25½
bushels from 255 acres. (fn. 60)
In 1553 David Vincent, a groom of the privy
chamber (see manor), had a grant of land and tithes,
including the site of the chapel of Petersham, with
13 quarters of wheat pertaining thereto. (fn. 61) The
appointment of the curate was found in 1658 to
be in the hands of the vicar of Kingston; (fn. 62) but
from a note in the parish registers it appears that
when the Rev. Henry Walker intimated his appointment by the vicar to the Countess of Dysart in 1667,
she claimed it as her right. She was, however, content
to approve of Mr. Walker as curate.
The commissioners of 1658 recommended the
union of Petersham with Ham and Hatch as a separate
parish, but it was not done. Bishop Willis's Visitation
Returns, 1725, (fn. 63) say that Petersham chapel had been
'partly endowed' by a Mr. Hatton and his family,
probably the Mr. William Hatton of East Molesey
who left an endowment to Thames Ditton (q.v.)
in 1703. A Robert Hatton had also been Recorder
of Kingston in 1638.
In 1769 Petersham was separated from Kingston
by Act of Parliament and joined to Kew (q.v.), (fn. 64)
to which it remained attached until 1891, when, in
accordance with the Kew and Petersham Vicarage Acts,
it was separated therefrom. It is now a vicarage in
the gift of the Crown. The rectorial tithe is held by
the Earl of Dysart.
CHARITIES
Almshouses for six persons were
built in 1867 by Madame Tildesley
de Bosset, who endowed them by
will. George Cole in 1624 gave a small benefaction
charged on land in Sudbrook Park for the poor,
which was returned in 1894 as not paid since 1859.
Dr. Triplet's benefaction of 1668 for apprenticing
children is partly shared by Petersham. The Poor's
land or the Poor's Half-acre, a house, and some
cottages, the rent of which is applied for general
purposes of poor relief, were also given by him at the
same date.
Smith's Charity is distributed as in other Surrey
parishes. The whole are under one management by
a scheme of the Charity Commissioners. (fn. 65)