North End, Littleworth, And Spaniard's End. (fn. 67)
Sandgate, one of the Anglo-Saxon boundary
points, has been plausibly located at North End (fn. 68)
and probably represented a gap in the surrounding
woodland. The wood, Wildwood, part of Eton College's Wyldes estate in Hendon, probably originally
extended across to the northern slopes of Hampstead
Heath (fn. 69) and by 1632 it marked the parish boundary. (fn. 70)
Until c. 1730 the ancient route across the heath to
Hendon took a sharp westward turn, before turning
north again. Its twists were presumably imposed by
obstacles, probably dense woodland, at the location
marked as Wildwood Corner c. 1672. (fn. 71) About 1730
a cutting was made through the heath west of the old
route, creating the modern North End Way (formerly
Road), a more direct route to Hendon. (fn. 72)
In the late 16th century there was a wayside cottage at the northern end of the heath. (fn. 73) Cottages
were mentioned on the northern part of the heath in
1666 (fn. 74) and at Wildwood Corner in 1679 and 1685. (fn. 75)
By the end of the century houses around a pond
where the road turned west and on both sides of the
road where it turned north again formed a village
called North End. The house belonging to Thomas
Tidd, wheelwright, who had lived in the area since
1666, was termed a 'mansion house' in 1692. (fn. 76) By
1710 there were 10 people paying 19 quit rents for
18 houses and cottages, and 2¾ a., almost all taken
from the heath, at 'over the heath or North End'. (fn. 77)
The copyholders included William Trott, a London
draper, (fn. 78) and Joseph Keble (1632-1710), the barrister and essayist, who for the sake of the air had
bought a small estate, where he lived for part of the
week. (fn. 79)
Two of the 18 houses were recently built cottages
at 'le Parkgate', later called Spaniard's End, at the
north-east end of the heath and parish. (fn. 80) The only
other building in the area was Mother Huff's, an
inn later called the Shakespeare's Head, on the edge
of the demesne land fronting Spaniard's Road. (fn. 81) The
house, where Mother Huff claimed in 1728 to have
been for 50 years, was recorded in 1680 and may
have been the New inn marked on the road through
Cane Wood (Kenwood) to Highgate c. 1672. (fn. 82)
At the other side of the heath, where Heath Road
branched into North End Way and Spaniard's Road,
was Jack Straw's Castle. The inn may not have been
as early as the possibly mid 16th-century brick
foundations. (fn. 83) In 1670 Henry Skerrett was licensed
to enclose 2 a. of heath, between the road to Hendon
on the east and an old gravel pit, as a bowling green
to entertain guests. There were new buildings there
in 1673, a house and a cottage next to the bowling
green by 1686, (fn. 84) and three cottages by 1711. They
were then held by John Fletcher, an innholder who
lost them through financial difficulties to the brewer
John Vincent. (fn. 85) The three cottages were called Jack
Straw's Castle in 1713, when Vincent acquired waste
nearby. (fn. 86) Cottages were built nearby in the late 17th
and the early 18th century, some by squatters. (fn. 87) In
1690 Silvester Killett owned a cottage next to the
bowling green; in 1714 his family gave the cottage
for the use of the poor. (fn. 88)
There was modest growth during the early 18th
century, with a few country houses appearing among
the cottages. In North End the Bull and Bush,
licensed from 1721, (fn. 89) may have originated in the
estate belonging to the Tidds in the 17th century; (fn. 90)
although the story of Hogarth's residence there was
probably apocryphal, the inn attracted artists and
writers in his day. (fn. 91) A second inn, the Hare and
Hounds, was licensed from 1751. (fn. 92) Robert Dingley
(d. 1742), a City goldsmith, acquired a small house
in North End in 1727 and a grant of waste in 1738.
He left the estate to his younger son Charles, who
made a fortune out of trade with Russia and by 1769
had bought buildings and pieces of waste in Hampstead (fn. 93) in 17 separate lots. (fn. 94) In 1762, when North
End contained 17 houses, 3 cottages, and 2 inns,
Dingley's house, called in turn Wildwoods, North
End, and Pitt House, was set in 2½ a., mostly on the
southern side of the village, and included a coach
house, stabling, garden, grotto, wilderness, and four
other houses. (fn. 95) Politically ambitious, Dingley invited
William Pitt the elder to North End in 1763. Asserting that no ague was ever known there, he made
considerable alterations, building a new wing and a
gymnasium for Pitt's children by 1766, when Pitt
first moved in. Pitt returned during his illness in
1767 but Dingley, put up as a candidate to oppose
Wilkes, died in 1769 after being beaten up by the
mob. (fn. 96)
In 1770 one of two new brick houses on the eastern
side of North End, later called Hollybush Hill, was
occupied by a wine merchant. (fn. 97) In 1781, with another
house to the south called Myrtle, later Byron, Cottage or Lodge, it was bought by John Bland (d.
1788), a City banker. (fn. 98) In 1787 the eastern portion
of Dingley's estate, where a cottage had been demolished in 1786, passed to Bland by bequest. (fn. 99) Most
of Dingley's estate, including Pitt House, was bought
in 1787 by Abraham Robarts, another banker, who
sold it in 1807 to John Vivian, solicitor to the
Excise. (fn. 1) Robarts and Vivian apparently occupied
Pitt House. Byron Cottage was occupied by the judge
Sir Robert Dallas (1756-1824) c. 1810, (fn. 2) by the
Quaker philanthropist Sir Thomas Buxton (1786-
1845) and his wife Hannah, sister-in-law of Samuel
Hoare the younger, before 1820, (fn. 3) and by the marchioness of Lansdowne in 1823. (fn. 4) Hope Cottage, a
weatherboarded cottage near the Bull and Bush,
housed the painter John Linnell in 1822 and, after
he had moved to Wyldes, his friend the painter,
William Collins. Both were visited by fellow artists,
including Blake, Varley, Morland, and Palmer, attracted, according to William Collins's son Wilkie,
the novelist, 'by some of the prettiest and most varied
inland scenery'. (fn. 5)
In 1734 John Turner, a rich draper or tobacconist
from Fleet Street, built at Parkgate a house called
the Firs, after the clump of trees which he planted
on the heath and which were to be painted by Constable and others. (fn. 6) By 1762 it was one of five houses
at what was called Spaniard's quarter. (fn. 7) Another
was Parkgate, on the boundary, then occupied by
John Sanderson, architect of the parish church. (fn. 8)
Spaniards inn, which gave its name to the district,
lay just over the border. (fn. 9) About 1788 Heath End
House was built on the site of three of the houses of
1762, (fn. 10) next to Saunderson's house, which was purchased about the same time by Thomas Erskine
(1750-1823), later Lord Chancellor. (fn. 11) Erskine created
a stuccoed house, which he called Evergreen Hill
(later Erskine House), with a covered porch and very
large upper windows for a room designed as a banqueting hall to entertain George III. (fn. 12) Humphry
Repton worked on the grounds, which were stocked
with Scottish fir trees from Kew. (fn. 13) Erskine bought a
piece of demesne land fronting Kenwood Lane in
1804, which became an extension of his garden,
linked by a tunnel under the road. He took leases in
1806 of the former Shakespeare's Head, where the
Elms was built by 1851, and in 1811 of more
demesne. (fn. 14) He left c. 1819 and by 1834 his house was
occupied by Sir Nicholas Conyngham Tindal (1776-
1846), chief justice of the Common Pleas, (fn. 15) who may
have been responsible for building by 1848 another
house on the east side of Spaniard's Road, north of
the Elms. (fn. 16) Charles Bosanquet (1769-1850), a
governor of the South Sea Co., then lived at the
Firs, where his brother Sir John (1773-1847), the
judge, died. (fn. 17)
Small plots were taken from the heath near Jack
Straw's Castle during the 18 years from c. 1720 when
the stewardship of the manor was in dispute, and in
1737 several people had to regularize their titles to
land in the area by then called Littleworth. (fn. 18) Most
were local tradesmen or craftsmen like the harnessmaker Samuel Hatch or the tallow chandler John
Ayres, (fn. 19) of whose cottages one illustrated at the end
of the century may have been typical. (fn. 20) By 1720,
however, the gentry had begun to move in. Three
cottages, part of John Fletcher's estate, had been
converted to two houses, one of which was occupied
by William Brooks, gentleman, (fn. 21) and in 1734 was a
good brick house, about half way over the heath,
with a view over nine or ten counties. (fn. 22) The house
was part of lands acquired from 1720 by Joseph Rous
(d. 1731), a London gentleman, (fn. 23) and in 1744 it was
sold, with adjacent parcels enclosed from the waste,
to Christopher Arnold, a goldsmith and partner in
Hoare's bank, who was granted more waste in the
same year. (fn. 24) By 1762 Arnold had a house and stabling
in 1½ a. bounded by North End Way and Spaniard's
Road, the whole later called the Heath or Heath
House. (fn. 25) Another cottage built before 1738, the most
northerly of the Littleworth group, was enlarged,
probably by Lewis Allen after 1749. (fn. 26) By 1762
Littleworth consisted of Heath House on the east
side of the Hendon road, (fn. 27) Jack Straw's Castle and
nine cottages, on the west side, (fn. 28) and a house and
two cottages a little to the north, also on the west
side. (fn. 29)
Jack Straw's Castle, popular both with visitors to
the wells and with travellers, (fn. 30) was important in publicizing the attractions of the locality, with ease of
access from London, proximity to the heath, and
wide views. As a consequence Littleworth, the hamlet of humble cottages, was transformed into an area
of villas set in extensive grounds and lost its former
name, often being called simply the Heath. (fn. 31) In 1764
the painter William Oram bought an existing plot,
where by 1770 he had built a brick house and stabling. (fn. 32) In 1777 his widow conveyed the house to
Francis Willes, in 1784 knighted for secret service
work as a decipherer. (fn. 33) Willes (d. 1828) bought the
adjoining plots, including the poor cottages, and acquired grants of waste to make a total of over 2 a.,
centred on the house later called Heathlands. (fn. 34)
In 1775 Jane Hemet alias Mrs. Lessingham,
actress and mistress of Sir William Addington, a
magistrate, was granted 2 a. of waste at Gibbet Hill,
west of the road to North End, where she employed
the builder Bradley to erect a house. Henry White,
another builder, led protestors who, claiming that
she was not a copyholder and was not entitled to the
grant, filled in the excavations. In 1776 she overcame
the technicality by buying a cottage at Littleworth
and succeeded in building Heath Lodge in the centre
of the heath, (fn. 35) a three-storyed cube with a central
semicircular bay and flanking two-storeyed wings
designed by James Wyatt on the model of a villa in
Italy. (fn. 36) Mrs. Lessingham (d. 1783) left the house to
Thomas Harris (d. 1820), manager of Covent Garden
theatre, but it was occupied by William, Lord Byron
(d. 1798), the poet's great-uncle, in 1784. (fn. 37)
Near Heath Lodge, the northernmost of the
Littleworth houses of 1762 (fn. 38) was three-storeyed with
a semicircular bay extending to the roof; (fn. 39) it was
advertised in 1779 as lately built. (fn. 40) In 1807 the house
(the Hill, Hill House, or the Whinns) was given to
Samuel Hoare the younger (d. 1847) by his father
Samuel the elder (d. 1825), who in 1790 had left
Stoke Newington for the healthy elevation of Heath
House. (fn. 41) The elder Samuel's father had become a
partner in Bland, Barnett & Co., the banking firm of
John Bland of North End, c. 1722. (fn. 42) The Hoares
were Quaker, later Anglican, bankers, prominent in
the anti-slavery movement and familiar with many
leading politicians and literary figures. George
Crabbe often visited Heath House and Tennyson
and Wordsworth met for the first time at the Hill in
1845. For a century the family played an important
part in Hampstead's history, supporting churches
and schools and other causes, and leading the battle
over the heath against Sir Thomas Maryon Wilson. (fn. 43)
Thomas Pool, who acquired Jack Straw's Castle
in 1774, built two brick houses in 1788, which c.
1820 were converted into one house south of the inn,
called successively Heath View, Earlsmead, and Old
Court House. (fn. 44)
Two adjacent cottages behind Jack Straw's Castle
came to be occupied by John, after 1806 Baron,
Crewe (d. 1829) and his wife Frances and by Lady
Camelford. At what became Crewe Cottage, Frances
Crewe (d. 1818), the celebrated beauty and Whig
hostess, from c. 1792 to c. 1807 entertained Fox,
Burke, Sheridan, Reynolds, Canning, the princess
of Wales, and Fanny Burney and her father. (fn. 45) Her
interests included helping refugees from the French
revolution and she may have been influential in
attracting many to Hampstead, including the marquis
de Cincello, who c. 1800 lived in a house near Hill
House, later called Cedar Lawn. (fn. 46) Camelford Cottage was occupied c. 1799 by Anne (d. 1803), widow
of the politician Thomas Pitt (1737-93), first Baron
Camelford and nephew of William Pitt, who had
stayed in North End. The house passed to her son
Thomas (1775-1804), the duellist, who was killed in
1804, and was afterwards occupied by her son-inlaw William Wyndham Grenville, Baron Grenville
(1759-1834), who also acquired Crewe Cottage c.
1807. Grenville was resident in Hampstead during
the period when he headed the Ministry of All the
Talents, which saw the abolition of the slave trade.
He left c. 1813, when both Crewe and Camelford
cottages were empty. (fn. 47)
Between 1805 and 1820 Samuel Sotheby, 'bookseller of the Strand', a founder of the auctioneering
firm, acquired several of the old cottages and adjacent plots of waste and built the house later called
Fern Lodge. He became bankrupt in 1829 and again
in 1841, when he lost his Hampstead estate. (fn. 48)
The combined population for North End and
Littleworth increased from 108 in 1801 to 307 in
1851 and 416 in 1871. (fn. 49) North End remained predominantly a village of agricultural labourers, gardeners, and laundresses, (fn. 50) and in 1839 had the second
highest concentration of laundries in the parish. (fn. 51)
There were a few tradesmen, like William Ambridge
the grocer in 1851, whose family had lived in Hampstead since the 17th century and owned property in
North End since the 18th. (fn. 52) The two inns survived
and a school had been built, largely through the support of John Gurney Hoare, in 1849 on the western
edge of North End. (fn. 53) In 1841 Pitt House was occupied by a clergyman who kept a boarding school and
in 1851 there was another boarding school in North
End Lodge. A solicitor lived in one of the Hollybush
houses in 1841, a barrister in Gothic Cottage in 1851,
and solicitors in North End Lodge and Stowe House
in 1871. Wildwood Lodge, a mid 19th-century cottage
orné, belonged to Queen Victoria's dentist before
1869 (fn. 54) and to a provision merchant in 1871, when
Myrtle Lodge housed a lamp manufacturer. The
poet Coventry Patmore (1823-96) lived in Elm Cottage c. 1862, (fn. 55) and the author Dinah Maria Mulock
(Mrs. Craik, 1826-87) in Wildwood Cottage from
1857 to 1864. (fn. 56)
Wildwood Grove, near the northern border, was a
terraced row begun in the 1860s. The local builder,
T. Clowser, was permitted to build four houses there
in 1871 and another six stood there and in Wildwood, probably Wildwood Terrace, by 1882. A new
school house was built in 1872 (fn. 57) and by 1875 there
were 77 houses and cottages in North End, including
a few over the border in Hendon. (fn. 58) A house was built
at the Hare and Hounds in 1879, additions were
made to the Bull and Bush in 1885, and Ambridge
Cottages were extended by a further three in 1887. (fn. 59)
By 1890 one house in Wildwood Terrace had become a convalescent home, a lieutenant-colonel lived
in Stowe House, and two Hoare sisters lived in North
End, as they still did in 1911. Most of North End
was still cottages in 1890 and there were several
laundries, although a new feature was the number of
tea gardens. (fn. 60) Presumably visitors included hikers
and cyclists, in addition to those attracted by the
Bull and Bush, celebrated in a music-hall song. (fn. 61)
On the east side of North End Avenue a second
North End House had been built by 1913 (fn. 62) and in
1923 Brandon House and Wyldeways were built
north of it. (fn. 63) Myrtle Lodge, farther north again, had
been renamed Byron Cottage after Fanny Lucy,
Lady Byron and later Lady Houston (1857-1936),
the thrice married ex-chorus girl and patriot, who
went to live there in 1908. (fn. 64) One small block of flats,
the Limes, was built between the two inns in 1935. (fn. 65)
Pitt House, in 1869 a two-storyed building with a
central doorway and a side bay, (fn. 66) was later enlarged
by the addition of a billiard room and in 1899 Sir
Harold Harmsworth, later Viscount Rothermere,
bought it and added a storey, also moving the
Georgian doorcase to the side bay. He sold it in 1908
and it was occupied during the First World War by
Valentine Fleming, M.P., and his sons the writers
Ian (d. 1964) and Peter (d. 1971), and from 1924 to
1939 by the earl of Clarendon. (fn. 67)
At Spaniard's End, Heath End House was occupied
by Sir William Parry (1790-1855), the Arctic explorer,
and from 1889 to 1912 by Canon Samuel Barnett
(1844-1913), the social reformer, and his wife Dame
Henrietta (1851-1936), founder of Hampstead Garden Suburb. In 1895 they lent the house, which they
called St. Jude's Cottage, to the painter James
Whistler (1834-1903) and in 1903 they took over
Erskine House for a convalescent home. The whole
estate was acquired by Sir Hall Caine (1853-1931),
the novelist, who demolished Erskine House in 1923.
From 1894 to 1908 the Elms was the home of Sir
Joseph Joel Duveen (1843-1908), the art dealer. (fn. 68)
The house to the north was demolished between
1891 and 1913. (fn. 69) A new house, called Mount Tyndale, was built in the 1920s and occupied in 1938 by
Viscount Knollys. (fn. 70)
The advertisement for Old Court House in 1839,
a detached residence with extensive views, suitable
for a 'family of respectability', could have applied to
any of the houses along North End Way. Old Court
House was used as an estate office during the 1850s
and 1860s although there is no evidence that courts
were held there (fn. 71) but the other houses continued as
substantial family homes. In 1841 the inhabitants
included merchants at Fern and Heath lodges, a
banker at Hill House, a clergyman at Camelford
Cottage, a solicitor at Crewe Cottage, and several
described as 'independent'. A major-general lived in
Fern Lodge in 1851 (fn. 72) and his widow and daughter
were still there in 1890. From 1872 until 1890 or
later Heathlands was the home of Hugh M. Matheson, the Far Eastern merchant. (fn. 73) By 1890 Sir Richard
Temple, Bt., had built Heath Brow on the site of
Crewe Cottage. (fn. 74) The elder Samuel Hoare's widow
Hannah (d. 1856) lived in Heath House which remained with the family until c. 1911 but was leased
by 1876. It was occupied from 1888 by Sir Algernon
Borthwick, later Baron Glenesk (1830-1908), the
newspaper proprietor, and by 1911 by Edward C.
Guinness, Viscount and later earl of Iveagh (1847-
1927), the philanthropist. When he left for Kenwood
in 1919, Guinness was succeeded by his third son
the statesman Walter Edward Guinness, later Baron
Moyne (1880-1944). (fn. 75) The second residence of the
Hoares, Hill House, was occupied after the younger
Samuel's death successively by his sons John Gurney
(d. 1876) and Francis until 1895. In 1896 Sir Samuel
Hoare, Bt., John Gurney's son, sold it to George
Fisher, who rebuilt the house. (fn. 76) He sold it in 1904
to William H. Lever, later Viscount Leverhulme
(1851-1925), the soap manufacturer, who made further additions, including a ballroom and art gallery,
and acquired the neighbouring Heath Lodge in 1911
and Cedar Lawn in 1914. Heath Lodge was demolished and Thomas Mawson designed grounds for
the combined estate. Cedar Lawn, which served as a
hospital during the First World War and subsequently as a maternity home, was demolished in
1922. In 1925 the whole estate was bought by Lord
Inverforth (1865-1955), the shipowner, and the new
house named Inverforth House. (fn. 77)
Much of North End was destroyed or damaged by
a parachute mine during the Second World War.
The Hare and Hounds was rebuilt in 1968. Pitt
House, used by the army and then left empty, was
sold in 1948 to an investment company, which demolished it in 1952 and replaced it with a house of the
same name; the L.C.C. acquired 3 a. of the garden
in 1954. (fn. 78) Building after 1945 was discreet and North
End kept its quiet village atmosphere in the 1980s.
The Old Bull and Bush, although largely rebuilt in
the 1920s, retained two 18th-century bay windows
and one venetian window. Behind it, an early 18thcentury pair, nos. 1 and 3 North End, remained, as
did Wildwood, dating from the 18th century and
tile-hung in the late 19th century. Byron Cottage
and the Gothic Wildwood Lodge also survived. (fn. 79)
Michael Ventris (1922-56), the architect and decipherer of Linear B, built no. 19 North End Avenue
in the 1950s. Sir Nikolaus Pevsner (d. 1983), the
architectural historian, lived at no. 2 Wildwood Terrace from 1936, next to Geoffrey Grigson the poet at
no. 3 in 1938. Sir Donald Wolfit (1902-68), the
actor manager, lived at no. 5 Wildwood Grove in the
1950s. (fn. 80)
At Spaniard's End the Firs was divided in the
1950s into three houses called the White House, the
Chantry, and Casa Maria, the third being formed
from the billiard room. The outbuildings were converted into other dwellings. Heath End House survived under the name Evergreen Hill, next to a wing
of the old Erskine House. (fn. 81) The Elms housed St.
Columba's hospital from 1957 and was then owned,
but rarely inhabited, by Barbara Hutton, the Woolworth heiress. In 1981 it was sold for a large sum to
the president of the United Arab Emirates but it remained unoccupied and in 1987 was sold to developers, the Holly Corporation. (fn. 82)
The greatest change has been in North End Way,
in the area once called Littleworth. In 1941 a second
land-mine destroyed Heathlands and Heath Brow
and damaged Jack Straw's Castle and Heath House. (fn. 83)
The house was repaired, occupied from 1971 by
Peter King, the publisher, and, despite its sale in
1977 to a property developer, (fn. 84) survived in the 1980s
as a 'large, square, somewhat grim-looking Georgian
house of brown brick'. (fn. 85) The inn was rebuilt in
1962. (fn. 86) In 1948 the Hampstead Heath Protection
society bought the site of Fern Lodge and presented
it to the L.C.C., which itself compulsorily purchased
the site of Heathlands in 1951, the combined ground
being opened to the public as part of the heath in
1955. The L.C.C. bought the site of Heath Brow in
1953 as a car park for visitors to the heath, and in
1955 part of the former garden of Heath Lodge,
which it opened to the public in 1963. Lord Inverforth left his estate in 1955 to Manor House hospital. (fn. 87) Old Court House survived, a square building
with a central portico and wings, dating from the
early 18th century and refaced later in the century; (fn. 88)
it was converted to old people's flats in the 1960s. (fn. 89)