MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
Domesday
Book describes six separate estates in Leyton.
Ralph Baynard held of Westminster Abbey an
estate worth 40s. comprising one hide held by
Tosti before the Conquest, 20 a. of meadow, and a
mill. (fn. 1) It was probably the estate 'near Walthamstow'
which the abbey claimed to have been given by
Aelfnoth of London, nephew of Swein. (fn. 2) This
Baynard holding appears to have broken up. The
mill remained among the abbey's possessions at
least until the 14th century, but was considered to be
in West Ham. (fn. 3) Another parcel, described from the
13th century as 15 a. of meadow, descended as part
of another Baynard estate, the manor of Tothill,
later Bloomsbury (Mdx.); this was held by the
London Charterhouse from 1375 to the Dissolution. (fn. 4) This parcel, called Leyton Made, (fn. 5) lay in
Walthamstow Marsh (fn. 6) north of the present Lea
Bridge Road. Part of Baynard's manor may have
become the estate in Leyton and Walthamstow held
in the 15th century by the Knott family, (fn. 7) for that
estate was warranted against Westminster Abbey
when it was sold in 1452. (fn. 8)
Hugh de Montfort held in demesne 3 hides and
30 a. which Alsi held as a manor before 1066, (fn. 9)
including one hide once held by a sokeman of the
manor of Havering. (fn. 10) This holding appears to have
passed to the priory of Holy Trinity, Aldgate, about
1121, and subsequently formed the manor of Cann
Hall, Wanstead. (fn. 11)
Robert Gernon held in demesne half a hide
worth 5s. which a freeman had held in 1066. (fn. 12) This
probably was later merged in the manor of Leyton
(see below).
Peter de Valognes held in demesne a manor and
3 hides worth 40s. (fn. 13) The descent of this estate is
traced below under Ruckholt manor.
The greatest part of the parish belonged in 1086
to Robert, son of Corbutio, whose two holdings,
comprising 7¼ hides, descended together as the
manor of LEYTON. The manor lay in the centre
and north-east of the parish, stretching from
the Lea marshes to the forest. The Phillebrook
formed much of its southern boundary, and Walthamstow and the Leyton lands of Mark Hall the
northern. Before 1066 four sokemen held 4 hides
in Leyton of the manor of Havering. (fn. 14) Three of
these hides were held in 1086 by Robert, son of
Corbutio, who also held in demesne a manor and
4¼ hides which Harold held before 1066. (fn. 15) The
manor probably remained in the Corbutio family
until about 1200, when Ralph de Arderne confirmed
a grant to the abbey of Stratford by Richard son
of Walter Corbutio (Corpechun) of the church of
St. Mary of Leyton and the wood of Leyton. (fn. 16) In
1237 or 1238 Richard, son and heir of Geoffrey,
son of Richard Corbutio (Corbicun), acknowledged
the right of Hugh, abbot of Stratford, to 2 hides in
Leyton, which he had of the gift of Richard Corbutio, his grandfather; the abbot used to render 8
marks yearly, but henceforth was to hold in free
alms. (fn. 17) In 1253 Henry III granted free warren to
the abbot and convent of Stratford for their demesne
lands in Leyton, with licence to inclose, assart,
till, and empark their grove of 'Corpech' in Leyton. (fn. 18)
By the late 12th century Stratford Abbey's estate
in the parish may also have included the half-hide
held in 1086 by Robert Gernon, (fn. 19) for Robert's fief,
which escheated to the Crown, was granted by
Henry I to William de Montfitchet, (fn. 20) the founder of
Stratford Abbey, whose son Gilbert was also a
benefactor. (fn. 21) Among the possessions of the abbey
taxed in 1291 Leyton was assessed at £23 3s. 6½d.,
excluding the rectory and advowson. (fn. 22) The abbot of
Stratford held ½ a knight's fee in Leyton in 1303
and 1346. (fn. 23) By that time a fourth holding had been
added to the estate.
In 1267 Godfrey de Liston died holding land in
Leyton of Sir Hugh de Neville. (fn. 24) He was succeeded
by his son and heir, John (d. 1303), who was
in turn succeeded by his son, Sir John de Liston
(d. 1332). (fn. 25) Before the latter's death part of his
property in Leyton passed into the hands of Edmund
Basset and Roger Samekyn, who had licence in
1331 to alienate to the abbey a messuage and 126 a.
of land of the clear yearly value of 38s. 7d. (fn. 26) Stratford also acquired in 1329 or 1330 from Sir John
de Liston a plot in Leytonstone called 'Jonesthyng
of Liston', worth £10 yearly. (fn. 27) Alfred de Vere, earl
of Oxford, appears to have been the abbot's tenant
in 1401, but the manor had apparently reverted to
demesne by 1428. (fn. 28) At the Dissolution much of the
demesne land was shared by nine tenants, among
them Morgan Wolfe, the remainder, with the manorhouse and buildings, rectory and tithes, being
leased to Thomas Campion. (fn. 29)
Stratford Abbey was surrendered to the King in
1538. (fn. 30) Thomas, Lord Wriothesley, Lord Chancellor, was granted the manor and rectory of Leyton
for life in 1544, and in 1545 was granted the reversion in fee with licence to alienate to Sir Ralph
Warren. (fn. 31) In 1546 Warren was granted the reversion
of the rents which had been reserved in the grants
to Wriothesley. (fn. 32) Sir Ralph, who had been lord
mayor of London in 1536–7 and 1544, died in
1553, (fn. 33) devising the manor and advowson of Leyton
for life to his wife Joan, daughter of John Lake of
London. She married Sir Thomas White in 1558
and died in 1572, (fn. 34) being succeeded by her son
Richard Warren. When Richard died in 1587 he
held the manor of Leyton in chief for 1/40 knight's
fee, the yearly value being estimated at £20. His
heir was his nephew, Oliver Cromwell, son and heir
of his sister, Joan, wife of Sir Henry Williams alias
Cromwell. (fn. 35) In 1599 Oliver Cromwell first leased
the manor for 20 years to Edward Ryder, a London
haberdasher, then later in the same year was licensed
to alienate it to Ryder. In this lease and at other
times later the manor was called LEYTON
GRANGE. (fn. 36) Edward Ryder died in 1609. He left
his estates to his brother, Sir William Ryder (lord
mayor of London in 1600), and to Sir Thomas Lake
(secretary of state, 1616), husband of Sir William's
daughter Mary, in trust to pay off his debts and
provide for his children. (fn. 37) Later the same year a
chancery commission awarded two-thirds of the
manor to Sir William Ryder and Sir Thomas Lake,
who had bought off Sir Baptist Hicks, to whom it
was mortgaged. The remaining third was reserved
for Edward Ryder's eldest son, Edward, a royal
ward. (fn. 38) Sir William Ryder died in 1611, leaving his
share to his two daughters, Mary Lake, and Susan,
widow of Sir Thomas Caesar, subject to an annuity
to their mother. (fn. 39) In 1617 Edward Ryder apparently
came of age and conveyed his share, including the
manor-house, to his cousin Mary, and her husband,
Sir Thomas Lake. (fn. 40) After Lake died in 1629 the
manor appears to have formed part of his widow's
jointure; she was described as lady of the manor in
1636. (fn. 41)
Lake's son, Sir Thomas Lake, sold the manor in
1650 to Captain George Swanley, Bernard Ozler,
and Robert Abbott. Swanley's share is said to have
included the site of the manor. (fn. 42) John Smith
(d. 1655), a London merchant, subsequently purchased Abbott's one-third share, and by his will,
dated 1653, devised it, subject to the life interest of
his niece, Elizabeth Coker, widow, to the poor of the
parishes of St. Swithin and St. Peter Eastgate,
Lincoln. (fn. 43) Swanley lived in Leyton and took an
active part in parish affairs. (fn. 44) By his will, proved
1658, he devised his third of the manor to his wife,
Barbara (d. 1686) with reversion to his son William
(d. 1688). (fn. 45) This third subsequently became vested
in George Swanley's three daughters, Martha,
Lady Clutterbuck, Sarah Limberry, and Mary,
wife of John Hanson. (fn. 46) In 1696 John Chinnall
bought Sarah Limberry's ninth. (fn. 47) Lady Clutterbuck's share was purchased by Oliver Martin in
1696 and sold by him the following year to Chinnall, who had by then also acquired Mary Hanson's
ninth. In 1703 Chinnall sold Swanley's reconstituted
third share to David Gansel. (fn. 48) Bernard Ozler's share
apparently passed to Robert Ozler, who by his will,
proved 1698, left his whole estate to Charles Hopton,
his cousin. Hopton sold Ozler's third share of the
manor to David Gansel in 1710, probably to raise
money for the free school to be provided under
Ozler's will. (fn. 49) David Gansel died in 1714 (fn. 50) and was
succeeded by his son, David (d. 1753), and he by his
son Col. (later Lt.-Gen.) William Gansel, who died
in debt in 1774. General Gansel's affairs passed into
Chancery and his heirs did not receive permission
to dispose of his property until 1783. Gansel's twothirds of the manor were then purchased by John
Pardoe, a director of the East India Company. (fn. 51)
In 1794 Pardoe purchased the remaining third from
the corporation of Lincoln, less their one-third
share in the reversion of the Forest House estate,
which they had already sold to Samuel Bosanquet
(d. 1806). (fn. 52) John Pardoe (d. 1798) was succeeded by
his grandson, John Pardoe (d. 1870). (fn. 53) By 1843
the demesne comprised only 131 a. (fn. 54) John Pardoe
was succeeded by his son, the Revd. John Pardoe
(d. 1879), vicar of Leyton, 1848–73. His son, the
Revd. John Pardoe (d. 1892), rector of Graveley
(Herts.), was succeeded by his son, Lt.-Col. Frank
Lionel Pardoe (d. 1948). His only surviving son,
Lt.-Col. Philip Pardoe, is the present (1966) lord of
the manor. (fn. 55)
A house called Leyton Grange was occupied by
John Hanger, husbandman, in the 1470s. (fn. 56) In
1535 Thomas Campion, merchant tailor of London,
obtained a 60-year lease of the manor-house of
Leyton, in which the parlours, buttery, stable, and
hayhouse were mentioned. (fn. 57) This lease of the 'grange
of Leyton' was bequeathed by him in 1539 to his
son, William, (fn. 58) subject to his widow's life interest.
The manor or grange house was mortgaged to
Anthony Holmead by Edward Ryder in 1608. (fn. 59)
This earliest recorded house probably lay east of
Leyton church and may have disappeared about the
late 1640s when the site of the grange house and 'the
ground on which it stood' is first mentioned, though
the gatehouse apparently remained. (fn. 60) The house
later known as Leyton Grange probably occupied
the site of its predecessor; it was built by David
Gansel (d. 1753) to his own designs and completed
in 1720. The house, although not large, had considerable architectural pretensions. Contemporary
engravings show a front elevation of two storeys and
five bays, the three central bays being flanked by
Corinthian pilasters and crowned by an open scrolled
pediment behind which was a small dome; four
classical figures stood on the balustraded parapet.
The central doorway had a semi-circular porch
with a round-headed niche above it. The grounds
are shown with an ambitious layout, including
converging avenues of trees and a forecourt
flanked by out-buildings. The house lay on the line
of the present Grange Park Road, north of Church
Road. (fn. 61) In 1730 Gansel purchased East Donyland
Hall. (fn. 62) This may explain his sale of Leyton Grange
to (Sir) John Strange, later Master of the Rolls, (fn. 63)
about 1735, thereby separating the house from the
manor. (fn. 64) Strange (d. 1754) added two wings to the
Grange before 1746 and altered the grounds. (fn. 65)
After his death his son, John, sold the house to
Thomas Blayden (d. 1780), governor of Maryland, (fn. 66)
whose heirs sold it in 1781 to Nathaniel Brassey.
Thomas Lane bought it from Brassey in 1796;
his son, John, was living there in 1824. (fn. 67) William
Rhodes, brickmaker, the grandfather of Cecil
Rhodes, was John Lane's tenant between 1829 and
1843. (fn. 68) John Lane was residing there in 1848. (fn. 69)
Edward Charrington, the brewer, was the tenant
from about 1855 until the Grange was sold in 1860
to the British Land Company, who demolished it in
the following year and developed the estate. (fn. 70)
When John Pardoe bought part of the manor in
1783 he already owned a red-brick house on the
north side of Capworth Street, with grounds
stretching back to Lea Bridge Road. He had bought
it in 1763 from one of the heirs to Sir Richard
Hopkins's estate, which was broken up in 1746.
The house, which was square in front with bowwindows at the back, may have been built by
Anthony André about 1758 to replace an older one.
From 1783 it became Leyton manor-house. (fn. 71) Between about 1800 and 1820 it was leased to Thomas
Flower Ellis; it was empty between 1826 and 1831,
but John Pardoe lived there from 1832 until his
death in 1870. The Revd. John Pardoe occupied the
house in 1874; it was burnt down in 1884. (fn. 72)
The BARCLAY PARK estate was built up
in the 19th century by the Barclays, the bankers, (fn. 73)
by the purchase of adjoining properties; the two
largest were the house known in the 19th century
as Barclays or Knotts Green House (fn. 74) and another
house, owned in the 18th century by the Bertie
family, (fn. 75) known in the late 19th century as Leyton
House. The estate was bounded by the present
Lea Bridge Road, Leyton Green Road, and James
Lane, and adjoined the Forest House estate.
The Knotts Green House property probably
originated in the house and 7 a. of land at Diggons
Cross, with 7 a. more at Leyton Bridge, for which
Thomas Curteys paid rent in 1537–8. (fn. 76) In 1631
William Johnson left a house and an old decayed
tenement at Diggons Cross, with adjoining closes
containing 10 a., and about 21 a. land including an
8 a. close at Leyton Bridge, to his son Thomas.
In 1649 Thomas sold this to Thomas Hopkins,
whose daughter, Alice, married Sir Thomas Lee.
In 1698 the Lees sold it to Peter Cartwright. (fn. 77)
In 1768 Charles Jackson had a 40-year lease of what
appears to be the same property, with its adjoining
10 a., but by then described as on Knotts Green. (fn. 78)
In 1786 he bought it from the heirs of Richard
Burbidge and his wife Mary. (fn. 79) In 1787 Gilbert
Slater (d. 1793), an East India merchant, replaces
Charles Jackson as owner in the land tax assessments. (fn. 80) He had married an Elizabeth Jackson (d.
1797) in 1784 and the property may have come to
him under some form of settlement. (fn. 81) Slater left
the house to his wife, who in turn left it to their
son, James, a minor. In 1815 James sold it to John
McTaggart, whose father John (d. 1810), a Scottish
shipping merchant, had acquired the lease of it, with
38 a. land, in 1798. (fn. 82) In 1821 John McTaggart sold
it to Robert Barclay (d. 1853). (fn. 83) In 1843 it amounted
to 31 a., with a further 8 a. adjoining, leased from
Samuel Bosanquet of Forest House. (fn. 84)
The house and grounds owned by the Bertie
family in the 18th century were sold in 1788 by
Catherine Dorothy, daughter of Peregrine Bertie,
with 20 a. of land, to William Masterman (d. 1845). (fn. 85)
In 1843 Masterman owned about 50 a. in Leyton
and the Walthamstow Slip. (fn. 86) His son, John, died
in 1862, when the house and about 27 a. were sold
to Joseph Gurney Barclay, son of Robert. (fn. 87) By 1863
the house had come to be known as Leyton House. (fn. 88)
The Barclays also bought neighbouring fields and
small properties, and by 1898, when J. G. Barclay
died, (fn. 89) the estate, with park and gardens, covered a
compact 100 a. In 1898 the estate was auctioned and,
with the exception of the house and 2½ a. grounds,
sold for development. (fn. 90)
The original house at Diggons Cross, for which
Thomas Hopkins was assessed at 11 hearths in
1662, and his widow, Sarah, at 12 in 1670 and 1674, (fn. 91)
had been pulled down some years before 1786, and
replaced by a 'capital modern built house', unnamed but described as 'on Knotts Green', perhaps built by Charles Jackson. (fn. 92) The new house was
a plain two-storeyed building of yellow brick with
a mansard slate roof. (fn. 93) From a brick dated 1791 it
appears that Gilbert Slater, who occupied it from
1786 to 1793, (fn. 94) built bow-windowed extensions on
each side. In contrast to the plain exterior the interior was elaborately decorated, possibly by Slater.
The entrance hall had plaster moulded panels.
Other rooms were enriched by plaques, mouldings,
and Adam-style ceilings, and by mahogany and
satinwood doors. The first-floor landing had an
open-columned screen, and open, oval balustraded
gallery. Slater, an ardent gardener, planted the
grounds with rare items collected from China, the
East Indies, and America. (fn. 95) After 1821 Robert Barclay added an east wing to the house, which became
known as Barclays or Knotts Green House. In
1854 an observatory was built in the grounds. (fn. 96) In
1900 Knotts Green House was bought by Livingstone medical college for missionaries, which had
opened in Bow in temporary premises in 1893.
During the Second World War the college was
occupied by the army. It reopened in 1946 but
moved to Reigate (Surr.) soon after 1947. (fn. 97) The
house remained empty until 1951 when it was
acquired by Leyton borough council. (fn. 98) In 1952 the
Livingstone Court flats were built in the grounds. (fn. 99)
The house itself, leased as offices for a few years
after 1954, (fn. 100) was demolished in 1961. (fn. 101) A block of
flats called Livingstone College Towers was built
on the site in 1963. (fn. 102)
The Bertie family's house, called Leyton House
from the late 19th century, is said to have been
built in 1712 and pulled down in 1915. (fn. 103) A watercolour dated 1902 shows an 18th-century house of
two storeys, the main front of five windows having
attics above, and flanked on each side by flatroofed bays. (fn. 104) The site was occupied in 1968 as a
bus garage. Further south the former gardener's
lodge stands at right angles to the road, backing on
Barclay Hall. It was originally a substantial timberframed house, probably of the 17th century, but
the front and side walls have been rebuilt in brick.
Only the back wall and the tie-beam roof contain
original timbers. The building was attached about
1896 to the Barclay Hall mission (fn. 105) as a house for the
missioner. It was modernized in 1949. (fn. 106)
The BOURNE estate in Leytonstone was created
by Robert Harrington of Leytonstone, a native of
Witham-on-the-Hill (Lincs.), who, by will proved
1657, left all his lands in Leyton to the poor of
Bourne (Lincs.). (fn. 107) The copyhold lands, in the manor
of Ruckholt, had been surrendered to the use of his
will in 1650. (fn. 108) The Bourne trustees do not appear to
have been admitted until 1673. (fn. 109) In 1736 the copyhold was described as 5 houses and 47 a. land. (fn. 110) In
1843 the estate comprised some 39 a., including the
Crown Inn, Leytonstone, the west side of Leytonstone High Road from Church Lane to the present
railway line (including 20 a. of land occupied by
Protheroe and Morris, nurserymen), and 11 a. of
inclosed marshland meadow, part of Tumbling
mead and the site later of the Temple Mills sidings
waggon works. (fn. 111) The nursery ground was developed
as a building estate in 1894. (fn. 112) The estate, which in
1962 amounted to 28 a., (fn. 113) produced in 1967 an
income of £12,334, derived from rents and managed
by trustees. (fn. 114)
The FOREST HOUSE estate, near Whipps
Cross, lay between the forest, the Phillebrook, and
James Lane, and included part of the Walthamstow
Slip. (fn. 115) It originated in 1492, when the abbot of
Stratford, lord of the manor of Leyton, leased to
John More of London, stockfishmonger, three
crofts called 'Cristemassebreche', containing about
20 a., for three consecutive terms of 99 years
(expiring 1789). (fn. 116) In 1650, when the manor was
divided into three parts, (fn. 117) the profits of the lease
were similarly divided. In 1750 Samuel Bosanquet
(d. 1765) secured from David Gansel renewal of
the lease as to two-thirds of the property for 300
years from its expiry in 1789, on the same terms
as before. (fn. 118) Lincoln corporation were apparently
prepared to negotiate a similar renewal as to their
one-third share, but instead in 1780 sold to Samuel
Bosanquet (d. 1806), the leaseholder, the reversion
expectant (in 1789) of their one-third share. (fn. 119) In
1858 the trustees of John Pardoe sold to Samuel R.
Bosanquet the reversion of the remaining two-thirds. (fn. 120)
At an unknown date John More's lease came into
the hands of Richard Barnes, whose widow, Agatha,
in 1568, granted it to Thomas Powle and others, in
trust for herself and her children. (fn. 121) In 1579 Powle
and the children sold it, with 'the Forest house',
to Henry Johnson of Woodford, (fn. 122) whose widow,
Dorothy, sold it in 1592 to Ralph Colston, skinner. (fn. 123)
Barnes, Powle, and Colston were all keepers of
Leyton walk in Waltham forest. (fn. 124) In 1599 Ralph
also bought from Oliver Cromwell, lord of the
manor, a lease of an orchard, for two consecutive
terms of 99 years, backdated to 1591. (fn. 125) In 1601
Ralph sold both leases, said to cover 33 a. and the
orchard, to Sir Thomas Baker (d. 1625) of Sissinghurst (Kent). Sir Thomas already owned a house
and 16 a. freehold land, which he had acquired
about 1594 from Edmund Withypoll; these lay in
Walthamstow (the Slip) and had hitherto divided the
leasehold crofts. (fn. 126) Sir Thomas's son, Thomas (d.
1657), was heir to the freehold, and also inherited
the leasehold, which had formed his mother Constance's jointure, on her death in 1625. (fn. 127) In 1658
his widow, Alice, married Charles, Lord Goring
(d. 1671), who became earl of Norwich in 1663.
Thomas Baker had died intestate, and it appears
that Alice, who administered the estate, retained
the leasehold portion, while the freehold portion
was inherited by Sir John Hanmer, whose mother,
Elizabeth, was Thomas's sister. In 1665 the estate
was reunited when Sir John conveyed the freehold
to Lord and Lady Norwich. (fn. 128) Shortly before her
death in 1680 Lady Norwich, in financial difficulties,
assigned Forest House and 44 a. of land to Sir
Henry Capel and his wife Dorothy, her niece and
next-of-kin. (fn. 129) They redeemed mortgages made by
Lady Norwich and in 1681 sold the estate to (Sir)
James Houblon (d. 1700), a founder of the Bank of
England, and friend of Evelyn and Pepys. (fn. 130) In
1703 Sir James's sons, Wynne and James, sold it to
Sir Gilbert Heathcote (d. 1733), another founder
of the Bank and lord mayor of London (1710),
reputed to be the richest commoner in England and
the meanest. (fn. 131) In 1743 Sir Gilbert's son, Sir John,
sold it to Samuel Bosanquet (d. 1765), a London
merchant of Huguenot descent. (fn. 132) The estate as
conveyed by Heathcote appears to have extended to
Whipps Cross, including the site of the house later
known as Forest Lodge. (fn. 133) In the next hundred
years, during which the estate descended in succession to Samuel Bosanquet (d. 1806), governor
of the Bank of England (1792), and his son Samuel
(d. 1843), it was consolidated by the purchase of
Whitings Grove (1783) and enlarged by acquisitions
elsewhere in Leyton. (fn. 134) In 1843 Samuel R. Bosanquet
(d. 1882) owned some 139 a. in Leyton and the
Walthamstow Slip. (fn. 135) After 1831 Dingestow Hall
(Mon.) became the Bosanquets' permanent home, (fn. 136)
but until the 1920s the family continued to be
one of the two largest landholders in Leyton. (fn. 137)
In 1889 Samuel C. Bosanquet (d. 1925) sold Forest
House and 44 a. grounds to the West Ham board
of guardians. (fn. 138) Forest Lodge was sold in 1900 (fn. 139)
and 30 Bosanquet properties on the west of Leyton
High Road, with a rental value of £1,804 a year,
in 1926. (fn. 140)
By 1568 the leasehold estate included a dwellinghouse. (fn. 141) By 1579 there were two, the chief one
called the Forest House. (fn. 142) It lay at the north-east
end of James Lane. Between 1601 and 1625 Sir
Thomas Baker enlarged the 'great' house, (fn. 143) which
was known as Goring House during the occupancy
of the earl of Norwich but called Forest House in
his will. (fn. 144) In 1664 Lord Norwich secured a 99-year
lease of an acre of the adjoining forest waste, with
licence to inclose it; and in 1681 Sir Henry Capel
was licensed to build a brick wall round the garden
created there. (fn. 145) According to the hearth tax assessments of 1662, 1670, and 1674 it was the largest
house in Leyton, with 23 hearths. (fn. 146) In 1683 John
Evelyn recorded that James Houblon was building
a new house. (fn. 147) This was the house which, with later
alterations, including a stuccoed exterior and perhaps
the addition of the third storey, survived until
1964. It had eleven bays, a capped parapet, and a
four-column Tuscan portico. (fn. 148) To the north-west
stood a red-brick stable range of the original date.
The entrance hall of the house and many of the
first-floor rooms had late-17th-century panelling,
some of it painted. There was a fine well staircase
with twisted balusters and moulded panelling.
Decorative work in the Adam style was commissioned
by the Bosanquets, the initials SB being painted
with classical subjects on one of the ceilings. Sir
John Soane's workmen were busy at the house in
1786 and the front was altered to his design in 1787,
but the bills only amounted to £130. (fn. 149) The house
was assessed in 1785 for 80 windows, a number only
exceeded in Leyton by the Great House. (fn. 150) Mary
Bosanquet, the Wesleyan preacher, grew up there. (fn. 151)
The Bosanquet family occupied it until 1831 after
which it was let until about 1884. After the West
Ham guardians bought it in 1889, it lay empty for
several years until it was adapted as an auxiliary
workhouse for about 300 old men. (fn. 152) Transferred to
West Ham borough council in 1930, it became a
home for old people. (fn. 153) It closed in 1962, when a new
hostel, Samuel Boyce Lodge, was opened in the
grounds. In 1964 it was demolished and the site
sold to the N.E. Metropolitan Hospital Board. (fn. 154)
A long stretch of the red-brick garden wall, presumably that erected by Sir Henry Capel in 1681,
is still standing.
The GREAT HOUSE estate lay in the centre of
Leyton, on the east side of the High Road, opposite
the sports ground. It adjoined the Moyer House
estate on the east, and was mainly copyhold of
the manor of Leyton. In 1686 Nathaniel Tench
(d. 1710), one of the first directors of the Bank of
England, became a ratepayer in Leyton, (fn. 155) having
apparently united two properties hitherto separately rated. One of these may have been the house
known later as Walnut Tree House and now as
Essex Hall. (fn. 156) In 1697 Nathaniel's son, Fisher
Tench (d. 1736, created a baronet 1715) was admitted with his wife Elizabeth to a capital messuage
and 29 a. of land on the surrender of his father. (fn. 157)
In 1713 Fisher Tench also acquired, from the Atlee
family, the adjoining copyhold property called
Cross House alias Bushes (which had belonged to
Thomas Pullison in 1572), (fn. 158) with 30 a. of land. (fn. 159)
Sir Fisher was succeeded by his son, Sir Nathaniel
Tench (d. 1737), and he by his sister Jane, who in
1740 married a widower, Adam Soresby. (fn. 160) When
she died in 1752 her stepson, William Soresby,
was admitted. (fn. 161) He surrendered the estate in 1758
to Thomas Oliver (1740–1803), whose father,
Richard (d. 1763), a West India merchant, acted
for him and may have bought it in his name.
Thomas's son, Richard, was admitted in 1803. (fn. 162)
At that date the estate comprised some 94 a., (fn. 163)
including the Great House, Cross House, Walnut
Tree House, (fn. 164) and Knotts and Brooklands. (fn. 165) In
1805 William Fry was admitted, then in 1806 John
Theophilus Daubuz (d. 1830). (fn. 166) The estate continued in the Daubuz family until the late 1870s. (fn. 167)
In 1843, with Knotts and Brooklands, it comprised
some 133 a. (fn. 168) Walnut Tree House and the house on
the site of the original Cross House were sold to
Jesse Jackson, a builder, about 1878. (fn. 169) The Great
House was sold to developers with 50 a. of land in
1881 and the estate built over in the 1880s and
1890s, (fn. 170) the house itself being demolished in 1905.
Essex Hall, formerly Walnut Tree House, which
is thought to be the oldest surviving building in
Leyton today (1968), may be the original house
acquired by Nathaniel Tench about 1686. It always
belonged to the Great House estate, and, though it
was said to have been kept as a dower-house, it was
usually let after the Great House was built to the
north-east of it. (fn. 171) It is a structurally timber-framed
building of two storeys, probably dating from the
16th century. Later alterations have obscured most
of its ancient features but the first-floor jetties have
survived at the front, along one side, and at a
gable-end at the rear. The house appears to have
been remodelled c. 1700 and again in the early 19th
century, giving the long front facing Jesse Road and
the two sides a largely Georgian appearance. Most
of the sash windows and the wide central porch
with Doric columns date from the early 19th century. Also in the 19th century sheets of slate were
screwed to the framing to give a flush surface
externally. The house contains a late-16th-century
stone fire-place with a frieze carved with arabesques
and an early-18th-century staircase with twisted
and turned balusters. A sundial in the garden
formerly bore the date 1666. (fn. 172) In 1804, when
Richard Oliver leased the house to Robert Smith,
it was called Walnut Tree House, and in 1813
when J. T. Daubuz leased it to Joseph Cotton,
previously an elder brother of Trinity House and
father of William Cotton, preservation of the large
walnut tree in the garden was stipulated. (fn. 173) The
1804 lease provided that the house should not be
used for a school, tavern, or factory, but it did
indeed become a school about 1870. (fn. 174) Since 1890
it has been let to the Leyton Constitutional (now
Conservative) Club, and known as Essex Hall. (fn. 175)
The Great House was built by Fisher Tench,
probably before 1712, when his 'handsome mansion
house' is mentioned. (fn. 176) It is possible that 'Tench Hall'
named on a map of c. 1700, was the new house. (fn. 177) It
was a large mansion of two storeys, basement, and
attics, built in the 'Wren' style of the period. (fn. 178) The
walls were of dark red brick with dressings of lighter
brickwork and stone. The entrance front faced the
high road (fn. 179) and consisted of a central block flanked
by lower and slightly recessed side wings. The main
block had full-height Corinthian pilasters and a
central pediment, while the wings had rusticated
stone quoins. The whole façade, of thirteen bays,
was surmounted by a modillion cornice, a panelled
parapet, and hipped roofs with dormer-windows;
six large stone vases broke the line of the parapet.
The garden front was of similar size and character.
The cupola now on the tower of St. Mary's church (fn. 180)
may have been a central feature of the house.
Internally there were doorcases, panelling, and a
fine staircase, of the original date. (fn. 181) Paintings on
the ceilings and staircase dome, of gods, goddesses,
cupids, and flowers, said to have been executed by
Sir James Thornhill, still survived in 1895. (fn. 182) A stable
range with a pedimented central feature stood at
right angles to the house at its south-west end and the
grounds were elaborately laid out with canals and
vistas. (fn. 183) The main floor (including the drawing room
and dining room) and first floor were remodelled in
the later 18th century according to plans made for
Thomas and Richard Oliver by the Adam brothers. (fn. 184)
Decorative features included a fine plaster ceiling
and delicately carved chimney-piece and doors in the
drawing room, all of which survived in 1901–2. (fn. 185)
Sash windows were probably inserted throughout
the house at this time. The central portico with
columns on the entrance front may also have dated
from this remodelling, though it could have been
later. (fn. 186) In 1785 the house was assessed for 98
windows, the highest assessment in Leyton. (fn. 187) After
the death of Lewis Charles Daubuz in 1839 the house
was often let. It was occupied for a few years
from 1850 by Canon Nathaniel Woodard's military
and engineering school, where boys from Lancing
College studied science, fortification, map reading,
surveying, and Hindustani. (fn. 188) In 1855 it was a boardinghouse. (fn. 189) The last Daubuz to occupy it, in 1858–60,
was James, Lewis's son. (fn. 190) In 1883 the estate developers sold it to the tenant, who was using it as
a private lunatic asylum. (fn. 191) In 1895 it was put up for
sale again, with the remaining 5 a. of grounds, as a
building estate. (fn. 192) After remaining on the market for
some time (fn. 193) it was demolished in 1905 (fn. 194) and flats built
on the site. In 1909 a memorial plaque was put up.
Cross House had been pulled down by 1806 and
the house now known as Grove House built on the
site, which lies farther south in High Road. (fn. 195) It
was occupied by Magdalen Daubuz, sister of John
Theophilus, who left it to her in 1830. When she
died in 1844 she left it to her niece, Mrs. Robert
Innes, who let it until 1878, when she sold it to
Jesse Jackson, who lived there. Since 1879 it has
been known as Grove House. (fn. 196) It is a three-storeyed
house of yellow brick with a columned porch and
bay-windows. For the late-Victorian treatment of
the bay-windows Jesse Jackson was probably
responsible, and he may also have added the top
storey. The house now (1968) belongs to the Leyton
and District Trades Hall and Institute.
The HALIWELL PRIORY estate originated in
the 12th-century gift to the priory of Haliwell in
St. Leonard, Shoreditch, by Gunnore de Valognes
of the 'vill' of Leyton, and the 40s. rent substituted
for this in 1201. (fn. 197) The estate lay in Ruckholt manor,
mainly between the present Langthorne Road (in
1721 called Hollewel Lane), (fn. 198) and Leytonstone
High Road, and included Halywell (later Holloway)
Down. (fn. 199) In the late 15th century the priory demesne
lands, listed in a tithe dispute with Stratford Abbey,
comprised 87 a. (fn. 200) In 1535 the estate was valued at
£3 6s. 8d. (fn. 201) In 1542 it was granted to Morgan
Phillips alias Wolfe (d. 1552), the King's goldsmith, (fn. 202)
who was granted the manor of Rayhouse in Barking
in the same year. (fn. 203) In 1550 Phillips bought remission
from the Crown of yearly rent for the property. (fn. 204)
The estate descended with Rayhouse until 1570,
when it was in the possession of Walter Morgan
and his wife Jane, (fn. 205) but by 1581 it had become
separated from Rayhouse. (fn. 206) Its subsequent ownership has not been traced, but it is said to have been
broken up. (fn. 207)
The estate called KNOTTS, later THE POPLARS, from which Knotts Green probably took
its name, is first mentioned in 1588, (fn. 208) and may have
originated in the estate in Leyton and Walthamstow
inherited by William Knott from his father Thomas
before 1451. (fn. 209) In 1452 William sold this estate to
Henry Benet, goldsmith of London, who sold it in
1456 to John Wardale, clerk. (fn. 210) In 1576 Thomas
Pullison bought from Walter Fish four pastures,
all 'lately parcels of … Knotts in Leyton or Walthamstow'; this suggests that the estate had partly
broken up. (fn. 211) In succeeding centuries the ownership of fields in the Knotts Green area was constantly changing. In 1587 Robert Rowe (fn. 212) died seised
of the capital messuage called Knotts 'and other
tenements there', his son and heir Thomas (later
Sir Thomas) being a minor. (fn. 213) Thomas, explorer of
the Amazon and first English ambassador to India
and Turkey, (fn. 214) parted with it, for in 1611 Toby Wood
died seised of it with over 20 a. of land. (fn. 215) In 1630
his son and heir Toby claimed for Knotts common
of pasture in the forest, with pannage, estimating
the lands at 100 a. (fn. 216) In 1670 this claim was repeated
on behalf of Mary Bland, widow. (fn. 217) In 1671 John
Bland was party to a conveyance of the capital
messuage called Knotts to Mathias Goodfellow, (fn. 218)
a merchant who occurs in hearth tax lists of 1670
and 1674, assessed for 14 hearths, (fn. 219) and who is
rated at £50 from 1669 to 1685. In 1686 Goodfellow is replaced in the rate books by Captain
Thomas Pulman (d. 1703), who is rated until
1702. (fn. 220) The estate has not been traced further by
name, but the location given in 1685 and 1698 of
a small croft which abutted westward on the estate
held at times by Thomas Rowe, John Bland, and
Mathias Goodfellow, shows that it lay north of
Wild Street Lane (now Lea Bridge Road). (fn. 221) It
may, therefore, be identified with the 'capital mansion' and grounds on either side of Hoe Street
and opposite the pond in the road, which was
owned in the mid 18th century, with 34 a. of land,
by Peter Cartwright's heirs. (fn. 222) It is shown, with
the pond, on Rocque's map, 1741–5. The property
was acquired in 1791 by Henry Wildman; it then
comprised about 46 a., including adjoining land and
Court House in Walthamstow. The whole estate
was sold in 1819 to William Copeland (d. 1826),
partner of the potter, Josiah Spode. His son,
William Taylor Copeland, as lord mayor of London
in 1835, entertained Princess Victoria and her
mother, the duchess of Kent, to lunch there. (fn. 223) In
1843 Copeland held it with about 29 a. in Leyton;
the whole estate was sold in 1854 and broken up. (fn. 224)
The house on the site in 1775, then called the White
House, was apparently being rebuilt at that date. (fn. 225)
The altered or new house, known later as The Poplars, was described as one of the largest and finest
in Leyton. (fn. 226) In 1892, when it was put on the market
with 8 a. as a building estate, it had 17 bedrooms. (fn. 227)
It was demolished about 1893, when the plans of
the layout of the Poplars estate were approved. (fn. 228)
The only known picture shows part of the front of
a brick building having a central three-storeyed
block of five bays with an oval window in its pediment; the central windows have stone architraves
with a balustrade below that on the first floor. There
were lower flanking wings with balustraded parapets. (fn. 229)
The KNOTTS AND BROOKLANDS estate
probably originated as part of the 15th-century
Knotts estate described above. In 1537 Robert
Elrington (fn. 230) was the manorial tenant of land at
Phillebrook called Brokeland and also of land at
Knotts Green. (fn. 231) Forty-five acres called 'Knottes
lands' were mortgaged in 1542 by John Elrington
and his son Robert (fn. 232) and in 1545 John Elrington
and his wife, Ursula, sold a messuage and 29 a. to
George Baldock. (fn. 233) In 1572 an arbitration award
against Henry Wolley acknowledged their son,
Robert's title to 24 a., called Knotts and Brooklands, lying east of the high road leading from the
church to Stratford, abutting north on Cross
House. (fn. 234) This description shows that the estate
lay in that part of Leyton High Road known by 1838
as Blue Row, (fn. 235) and now backing on Buckland Road,
together with the land in Phillebrook to the east
and south. In 1645, when the estate contained 28 a.
of freehold land with houses, under the will of
Edward Martin, weaver, a moiety of it was charged
with the provision of bibles for the children of the
parishes of Bermondsey and St. Olave, Southwark,
(Surr.), and St. George (Lond.). (fn. 236) In 1796 this
legacy was producing £9 a year, but was said to be
capable of improvement on the expiry of a long
lease. (fn. 237) By 1803 the estate was being held with the
Great House. (fn. 238) In 1811 John Theophilus Daubuz,
who held the lease with three more years to run
and who already owned the other half of the estate,
bought the freehold of the half charged with the
provisions of Martin's will. The estate, which then
consisted of 21 dwellings and 26 a. of land, (fn. 239) continued in the Daubuz family, (fn. 240) held with the Great
House estate. (fn. 241) The Blue Row houses were sold
about 1853 and the land in the 1870s. (fn. 242)
The manor of MARK in Leyton and Walthamstow is dealt with under Walthamstow. (fn. 243)
The MOYER HOUSE estate, built up in the
17th century, combined two adjoining properties,
Masters and the Brewhouse. Masters, which lay
on the south side of Masters (later Wallwood or
Moyers) Lane, now Hainault Road, belonged to
Richard Hanger, who by his will (proved 1479)
left 5 marks to repair the road leading from that
house to the church. (fn. 244) Thomas Hanger, greatgrandson and heir of Richard, sold Masters in 1530
to Morgan Wolfe, the King's goldsmith. (fn. 245) It was
held of the manor of Leyton, and in 1541 Wolfe
was granted the annual 17d. rent formerly payable
to Stratford Abbey. (fn. 246) The estate had descended by
1570 to Morgan Wolfe's son, Walter Morgan, and
his wife Jane. (fn. 247) Jane, widowed, was holding it in
1585 when Seth Lacy and John Mathew sold the
reversion of Masters after her death to Hugh
Kayle. Kayle's son Robert sold it in 1617 to Robert
Hudson. (fn. 248) In 1649 Hudson's executors sold it, with
about 19 a. of land, to Captain Lawrence Moyer
(d. 1685), warden of Trinity House, (fn. 249) an outspoken
Parliamentarian. (fn. 250)
The Brewhouse estate, also held of the manor of
Leyton, lay mainly between Masters and Wallwood. (fn. 251)
Before 1449 it belonged to John Hanger, and it
may have come into Richard Hanger's hands about
that date. (fn. 252) The land comprised 17 a. in 1537,
when it was held by John Hanger. (fn. 253) It was copyhold, and in 1562 Francis Hanger surrendered it
with the land to John Pragell, after whose death
Richard Stoneley was admitted in 1585. (fn. 254) In 1590
Stoneley surrendered it to John Fuller, who mortgaged it in 1592 to Thomas More, (fn. 255) with an additional 9 a. of pasture by Wallwood. In 1599, the
money not having been repaid, More was admitted,
but returned the property to Fuller on condition
that he should not alienate it for six years to anyone
but More, who was then to have it below the market
price and be repaid his admission fine. The property
finally came into More's hands in 1606 and was
immediately sold to Richard Baldock, but reserving
to More and his son, Christopher Cresacre, the footand cart-way from Wallwood to their dwelling
house. As this way (fn. 256) led off the high road past
Masters and the Brewhouse property, this suggests
that the More house was that shown on Rocque's
map (1741–5) on the north side of the lane, near the
junction with the high road, on the site occupied
in the late 19th century by Lea House and Lamb's
printing works. (fn. 257) The covenant reserving the way
was repeated in 1615 in favour of Cresacre More,
when Richard Baldock sold the Brewhouse estate
to Robert Hudson. In 1649 Hudson's executors sold
this estate also, by then apparently freehold, to
Lawrence Moyer. It then comprised the house and
26 a. of land. (fn. 258)
Lawrence Moyer's estate passed after his widow's
death in 1687 to his nephew Lawrence (d. 1721),
son of Samuel Moyer. By 1739 the estate stretched
from Moyer's Lane to the angle of Grove Green
Road beyond the Phillebrook, and amounted to 69
acres. (fn. 259) Lawrence's son and heir Benjamin (fn. 260) died in
1759. His daughters Lydia (d. 1822), who married
John Heathcote, (fn. 261) and Catherine Moyer (d. 1831),
succeeded to the estate as coheirs. Catherine left
it to her nephew, John Heathcote (d. 1838), for life,
then to his third son, the Revd. George Heathcote. (fn. 262)
The Moyer land was let to farmers after the death
of Benjamin Moyer. Twelve acres farmed together
in 1843 became known as Cashford's farm. (fn. 263) The
remaining 48 a., farmed in the 19th century by the
Bent family, with a farm-house built after 1843
near the angle of Grove Green Road, were known as
Bents or Grove farm. (fn. 264) Shortly before his death in
1893 George Heathcote sold the estate for development. By 1894 the Tottenham and Forest Gate
railway ran across it and occupied a large area for
sidings and goods yards. (fn. 265)
Masters became known as Moyer House. Captain
Lawrence Moyer mentions in his will that he had
enlarged it. (fn. 266) It was always occupied by the Moyer
family, and in 1783 was described as the oldest
house in the parish. (fn. 267) It was also one of the largest,
being assessed for 12 hearths in 1662, and for 69
windows in 1785. (fn. 268) Benjamin's widow, Frances,
lived there with her daughter Catherine until her
death in 1804, and Catherine, the last occupant,
until her own death in 1831. By 1832 the house had
been pulled down; (fn. 269) but some out-buildings remained, converted to a farm cottage for the tenant
of Cashford's farm. (fn. 270)
The manor of RUCKHOLT lay in the south
and south-east of the parish and included the hamlet
of Leytonstone. (fn. 271) In 1815 it comprised 892 a. (fn. 272)
'Leintuna' was held in 1066 by Swein the swarthy
as a manor and 3 hides, worth 20s. (fn. 273) In 1086 it
was held in demesne by Peter de Valognes and was
worth 40s. (fn. 274) Gunnore de Valognes, great-granddaughter of Peter, gave the 'vill' of Leyton to
Haliwell priory; in 1195 the gift was confirmed by
Richard I. (fn. 275) In 1201, apparently in settlement of
a dispute arising out of this gift, Gunnore and her
second husband Robert fitz Walter bought from the
priory some lands in Leyton, but granted to it 40s.
of rent in Leyton. (fn. 276) In 1201, too, the wood of
'Rocholt' ('rook wood'), held by Hugh de Marney,
is mentioned. (fn. 277) Robert outlived both his wife and
their daughter and heir Christine, widow of William
de Mandeville, earl of Essex. After his death in
1235 the Valognes barony devolved upon three
co-heirs, daughters of Gunnore's cousin, William
de Valognes (d. 1219). (fn. 278) These three, Lora, wife of
Henry de Balliol, chamberlain of Scotland, Isabel,
wife of David Comyn, and Christine, wife of Peter
de Maule, (fn. 279) in 1240 granted a carucate in Leyton for
½ knight's fee to William de Marney; William was
holding the wood of Ruckholt in 1248. (fn. 280) In 1257
Peter de Maule and his wife Christine granted a
messuage and a carucate in Leyton to William de
Bumpstead for ½ knight's fee. (fn. 281) The connexion
between this and the preceding transaction is not
clear. In 1275 Robert de Bumpstead gave John de
Munchensy £20 for life from his lands in Leyton,
'for his praiseworthy counsel'. (fn. 282) In 1284 or 1285
William, son of Robert de Bumpstead, granted his
manor called 'Rocholte Hall' to Sir Richard de la
Vache. (fn. 283) In 1286 it was agreed that William was
to hold the manor of Richard in fee tail for ½ knight's
fee, but in the event of William dying childless the
manor was to revert to Richard, after the death of
William's wife, Maud. (fn. 284) William de Bumpstead
was alive and holding ½ knight's fee in 1303, but
dead by 1316, when his widow, Maud, had letters
of protection. (fn. 285) In 1331–2 his son William vested the
manor in trustees, including John de Shordych and
his wife Ellen. This was apparently a settlement
in advance of his marriage to Joan, daughter of
Nicholas de Shordych, about 1341, when the manor
was vested for life in Sir John de Shordych with
remainder to William, Joan, their heirs, and the
heirs of William. (fn. 286) In 1345 the manor was forfeited
to the Crown, because William had been hanged
for killing Sir John de Shordych. (fn. 287) The Crown
returned it to Joan, William's widow, later in the
year, but she died soon after without issue. In
1346 Sir Richard de la Vache, cousin and heir of the
other Sir Richard de la Vache, held as ½ knight's fee
the manor formerly held by William de Bumpstead, (fn. 288)
having succeeded to the reversion of the estate. In
1359 Sir Richard's surviving trustee enfeoffed
Adam Fraunceys, citizen and mercer of London,
and his wife Agnes. (fn. 289) Adam Fraunceys died in
1375 and was succeeded by his son, Adam, who, as
a knight, was holding the manor in 1412. (fn. 290) Sir Adam
Fraunceys died in 1417; (fn. 291) his wife Margaret (d.
1444 or 1445), held Ruckholt in dower until her
death. (fn. 292) The manor then passed to their daughter,
Agnes, wife of Sir William Porter. Agnes died in
1461; her heir was Sir Thomas Charleton, son of her
sister, Elizabeth, who had married Thomas Charleton. (fn. 293) Sir Thomas died seised of the manor in 1465
and was succeeded by his son, Sir Richard. (fn. 294)
Between 1417 and 1465 the manor was regarded
as part of the honor of Warenne because Steeple
Bumpstead, the chief holding of the Bumpstead
family, formed part of that honor in 1086. (fn. 295) Sir
Richard was killed in 1485 at Bosworth. By a
subsequent Act of Attainder his lands were forfeited to the Crown, who granted Ruckholt to Sir
John Risley. (fn. 296) Ruckholt then descended along with
King's Place in Chigwell, (fn. 297) until 1592, when William,
Lord Compton, sold it to Henry Parvishe. (fn. 298) Parvishe died in 1593, having settled the manor on his
wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Gabriel Colston, for
life. (fn. 299) The widow married Michael Hicks, secretary
to Lord Burleigh; Hicks held courts in right of
his wife from 1595 to 1611, and after his death in
1612 she held them in her own name until 1633. (fn. 300)
In 1635 Gabriel Parvishe, son and heir of Henry
Parvishe, sold the manor to his stepbrother, Sir
William Hicks, Bt. (fn. 301) It descended with the baronetcy
until 1720, when Sir Harry Hicks, Bt., grandson of
Sir William, sold it to Robert Knight, cashier of the
South Sea Company. (fn. 302) Later the same year Knight
sold it to his brother-in-law, Benjamin Collyer, (fn. 303)
who mortgaged it in 1727 to Robert Knight the
younger, and in 1731 was forced to part with his
equity of redemption to Knight. In 1731 Knight
sold Ruckholt to the trustees under the will of
Frederick Tylney of Tylney Hall, Rotherwick
(Hants). Tylney's will, proved in 1725, made provision for his niece, Dorothy Glynne, wife of Richard
Tylney, Earl Tylney, and her children. Her eldest
son Richard died unmarried in 1736, and the estate
passed to his brother John. (fn. 304) Ruckholt subsequently
descended as part of the Wanstead House estate. (fn. 305) In
1843 the demesne comprised 264 a. (fn. 306)
A house was in existence by 1257, (fn. 307) known by
1284 as Ruckholt Hall. (fn. 308) Henry Parvishe, lord of
the manor from 1592 to 1593, is said to have built
a manor-house, (fn. 309) probably the Ruckholte listed in
1594 in Norden's Description of Essex among houses
of note. (fn. 310) Reference in 1719 to the old house 'which
stood near the now house' suggests that Parvishe's
house was built on a new site. (fn. 311) Ancient entrenchments still visible at Ruckholt in 1803, including
a moated circular embankment, may have marked
the site of the medieval house. (fn. 312) Parvishe's house
was described by Evelyn in 1659 as a melancholy
old house surrounded by trees and rooks; Pepys in
1665 thought it a 'good seat … let run to ruin'.
Its condition was probably the result of Sir William's
misfortunes during the Civil War and Interregnum. (fn. 313) Sir William Hicks, 2nd baronet, who
succeeded his father in 1680, at great expense
encased the house in brick and improved it in
other ways. (fn. 314) A map of 1721 shows it standing on the
south side of Temple Mills Lane (now Ruckholt
Road), half-H-shaped in plan, its main axis lying
north-south and the wings projecting on the east
front. Between 1721 and 1728 Benjamin Collyer
altered the grounds, converting the Phillebrook to
the north into a canal shaped like a keyhole, with
an ornamental island at the west end. (fn. 315) The Tylneys
did not occupy the house after purchasing the manor
in 1731; it was converted into a public breakfasting
house by William Barton between 1742 and 1744.
For about six years the place was popular with the
gentry, who were entertained with music and other
gaieties on Monday mornings during the summer. (fn. 316)
The house was pulled down in 1755–7; the materials
sold included a marble hall chimney-piece about
13 feet high with trophies and entablature. (fn. 317) A
farm-house, in existence by 1777, was built north
of Temple Mills Lane with farm buildings lying
south of the lane near the site of Ruckholt. (fn. 318) It was
occupied by Samuel Turner until his death in 1804,
when he was succeeded by his son, William, (fn. 319)
who farmed about 180 a. at Ruckholt. (fn. 320) He was
succeeded by his son-in-law, John Tyler, who was
farming Ruckholt in 1843, and continued to do so
until his death in 1880. (fn. 321) The house was occupied
as a cottage hospital from 1889 to 1891, (fn. 322) when it
was pulled down and Ruckholt Road board school (fn. 323)
built on the site. (fn. 324)
The WALLWOOD estate lay in the north of
Leytonstone, most of it in the manor of Leyton,
but the south-east portion, including Wallwood
house, in Ruckholt manor. It originated in the wood
granted to Stratford Abbey by Richard Corbutio
before 1200. (fn. 325) The abbey was licensed in 1248
to inclose the wood, and in 1253 it was disafforested. (fn. 326)
In 1291 it was known as Corpychonesfrith, and by
1323 Wallewood (fn. 327) perhaps from the earthworks
built to inclose it. (fn. 328)
After the Dissolution Wallwood was described as
the king's wood in 1538. (fn. 329) The grants of the manor
of Leyton to Lord Wriothesley in 1544–5 did not
mention Wallwood, though his licence in the same
year to alienate to Sir Ralph Warren included unnamed woods belonging to the manor. It is clear,
however, that Wallwood was regarded as Crown
property in the 16th century, with the Crown
appointing woodwards. (fn. 330) A survey of the king's
woods in 1604 included Wallwood, (fn. 331) but stated
that Edward Ryder, as lord of the manor of Leyton,
had challenged the Crown's title in the courts in
Elizabeth I's reign. (fn. 332) Ryder actually devised Wallwood with the manor of Leyton on his death in
1609. (fn. 333) His grandson, Skinner Ryder, also claimed
it in 1653, (fn. 334) but in 1655 a decree was made confirming the lord protector in possession (fn. 335) and in 1660
Ryder finally relinquished his claim. (fn. 336)
In 1660 Gobert Sykes was holding, presumably
of the Crown, woodgrounds called Wallwood containing, with a small piece of marsh, 173 a. That
year he leased them for 21 years to a Leyton grazier,
Edmund Osmond, with covenants for the upkeep
of the ditches, mounds, walls, and fences which
inclosed the grounds, and an agreed allotment of
timber for the purpose. (fn. 337) In 1693 the Crown leased
Wallwood for 99 years to Richard Savage, Lord
Colchester, later Earl Rivers. (fn. 338) Between 1679 and
1710 the wood was cleared (fn. 339) and became a farm.
The Crown lease to Lord Colchester was acquired
by the Owsley family, perhaps after the death of
Lord Colchester in 1712 or of his daughter and
heir Elizabeth in 1715, (fn. 340) and almost certainly by
1721. (fn. 341) The Owsleys also held by 1721 some copyhold property in Ruckholt manor, adjoining the
Wallwood estate and farmed with it. (fn. 342) In 1778
Dorothea Owsley was granted a new lease from the
Crown. (fn. 343) A map of 1777 (fn. 344) shows that the Crown
estate then comprised 159 a. lying south-west of the
forest and Assembly Row.
From 1778 Wallwood farm descended separately
from the dwelling-house which had been built on the
estate. (fn. 345) The Crown lease of the farm was inherited
from Dorothea Owsley by Robert Adams, grazier,
who was being rated for it from 1778. (fn. 346) It came later
into the possession of Philip Sansom of Leytonstone
House (d. 1815), whose daughter Elizabeth bought
the farm from the Crown, as 119 a., in 1820. (fn. 347)
She still held it in 1843, when it comprised 122 a.
farmed by Richard Payze. (fn. 348) In 1850 Charles Sansom
began the development of the farm as the Fillebrook
estate; by 1860 the large brick houses in Fillebrook
Road, backing on the railway line, had been built.
Fairlop Road was laid out next, followed by Colworth, Wallwood, Hainault, Bulwer, and Lytton
Roads. (fn. 349) The central part of this area was not built
on at first, but let for grazing or for nursery-gardens.
By 1887, however, there were 1,000 houses on the
estate, which was completed by 1890. (fn. 350)
The original Wallwood farm-house adjoined
Leytonstone High Road; it was built on the Owsleys'
copyhold property in Ruckholt manor, and was in
existence by 1721. (fn. 351) Richard Payze, the farm tenant,
occupied it in 1843. (fn. 352) When the building of the
railway in the 1850s cut off the farm-house from the
farm a new farm-house was built at the end of
Moyers Lane (now Hainault Road). (fn. 353) This disappeared with the development of the estate. (fn. 354)
There was no mention of a dwelling-house in the
Crown lease of Wallwood to Lord Colchester in
1693, (fn. 355) but the evidence of the rate books suggests
that by 1697 a house existed, which was occupied
by Newdigate Owsley until his death in 1714,
except for the years 1703–9, when John Lescalleet
was the occupant. (fn. 356) By 1721 it was known as Wallwood House. (fn. 357) Charles Owsley (d. 1731), son of
Newdigate, also lived there, from about 1719 until
his death. From 1732 a succession of tenants of the
Owsleys occupied the house. (fn. 358) In 1778 Dorothea
Owsley leased it with about 40 a. of land for 31
years (the term of her own Crown lease) to Thomas
Farrer, who had been occupying it since 1764.
On Farrer's bankruptcy in 1783 his lease was sold
to Robert Williams. (fn. 359) Between 1803 and 1812
George Millet occupied the house. (fn. 360) Williams died
in 1814 just before the execution of a new 99-year
Crown lease on his behalf backdated to 1809, the
end of the Owsleys' term. The lease, which stipulated that the house was to be rebuilt within the
next four years at a cost of at least £4,800, was
assigned in 1815 to William Cotton, the philanthropist, son of Captain Joseph Cotton of Walnut
Tree House. (fn. 361) In 1816 the vestry consented to
Cotton's inclosure of part of the forest, bringing
the Wallwood boundary on the north-east up to
the present (1968) Whipps Cross Road. (fn. 362) In 1817
Cotton purchased Wallwood House with 39 a. from
the Crown. (fn. 363) The new house was erected in 1817–18 to the designs of John Walters on a site northnorth-east of the old house; the contract with the
builder, Thomas Cubitt, specified the use of Ipswich
facing bricks and the best Portland stone. (fn. 364) It was
a severely plain square building of two storeys with
a pedimented portico on double columns on the
north-west entrance front; the principal rooms faced
south-east on the advice of Humphry Repton. A
lower L-shaped wing, which may have incorporated
older work, adjoined the main block on the southwest. It is known that some out-buildings of the
former house and the kitchen garden had been
retained. (fn. 365) William Cotton died in 1866; his son
Sir Henry sold the estate in 1874 to John Griffin,
who mortgaged it the following year. (fn. 366) Development plans, first laid before the local board in 1883, (fn. 367)
were delayed by a boundary dispute with the adjoining Fillebrook estate, and by 1890 only six buildings
were erected in Colworth Road. (fn. 368) By 1893 the
Imperial Bank, Ltd., now the mortgagee and itself
in liquidation, was in possession of the estate,
which was sold in 1894 by the London Joint Stock
Bank to Ernest Edward Rayner. In the same year
Rayner sold Wallwood house with 5 a. to Thomas
Ashbridge Smith. The Wallwood Park estate was
then laid out on the remainder of the property. (fn. 369)
T. A. Smith occupied Wallwood House until about
1921; the house was demolished shortly afterwards. (fn. 370)