MRP: Carshalton

From MarineLives
Jump to: navigation, search

Carshalton, Surrey

THIS ENTRY IS IN PREPARATION

Editorial history

07/10/11, CSG: Created page






Suggested links


See Oxted
See Putney
See Richmond

See Sir Edmund (Edmond) Hoskins (Lived in Carshalton)
See Francis Coventry (Lived in Carshalton; neighbour of Sir Edmund Hoskins)

See 10th April 1667, Letter from Francis Coventrie to Sir GO, Carshalton
See X April 1667, Letter from Elizabeth Hoskins, Carshalton



To do


(1) Improve this article on Carshalton, adding possible primary and secondary sources, and completing footnotes



Images

Carshalton ponds, Ellis, 1806


An engraving by William Ellis, dated 1806, reproduced below, shows Carshalton ponds.[1]

ENGRAVING Carshalton William Ellis 1806 Wikipedia DL CSG 050911.jpg

Elizabeth Dalyson wrote in a letter to her brother Sir George Oxenden that she had been invited by Elizabeth and Sir Edmund to spend a month at their Carshalton house with them.[2]



Mansion in Carshalton purchased by Edmund Hoskins, 1655


In 1655 Edmund Hoskins purchased a mansion or manor house in Carshalton, Surrey, called Mascalls. The mansion predated 1543, with a recent article in London Archaeology suggesting the manor house dated originally from the fourteenth century (ca. 1300-1350).[3] However, the article was unable to determine whether there was building continuity between this late medieval building and the building acquired in 1655 by Edmond Hoskins. Other nineteenth century topographical sources state that Mascalls was later renamed Carshalton Park House. There is no surviving image of Mascalls from the sixteenth, seventeenth or eighteenth centuries. A watercolour of "Carshalton Park, seat of George Taylor, Esq." by John Hassell dated 1822 is in the Surrey History Centre archives, but it is unclear whether this is a heavily modified Mascalls, or a new building, possibly on a slightly different site.[4] The ambitious building plans of Sir William Scawen, who had purchased Mascalls from Sir Edmund Hoskins' son John Hoskins, did not come to fruition. Scawen himself had multiple buildings in Carshalton, and used Stone Court as his main residence, rather than the manor house.[5]

An extensive review of textual, map and visual evidence of habitation on the mansion house site was published in the London Archaeologist,[6] The review locates the site of the mansion house near the intersection of the modern North Street, running north-south, and the modern Mill Lane, running west-east. The review notes that the main manor of Carshalton is generally accepted to have been owned by the Carew family in the fifteenth and sixteenth century. The manor was divided into two moieties in 1580, with one sold to the Burton family and the other to Walter Cole. Walter Cole's holdings included the manor house, together with ten and a half acres of non-contiguous fields. The Cole holdings were sold to the Trustees of the Countess of Arundel, ca. (18 James I), and were sold on by the Arundel trustees in 1655 to Edmond Hoskins. The review authors note that Edmond Hoskins paid hearth taxes for eighteen hearths and had a further eight untaxed hearths in two additional houses in the Carshalton area. The authors suggest that Sir William Scawen and subsequent owners in the eighteenth century continued to amass land, with the building eventually being named Samuel Long's house. Interestingly, they assert that the building was demolished in 1822. They supply an engraving of 'the seat of Samuel Long Esq.' from the topographer James Edward (1790), stating that the building, together with a further building of a Mr. Andrews, had formerly belonged to Sir William Scawen.[7] This engraving does not ressemble John Hassell's watercolour of 'Carshalton Park, seat of George Taylor, Esq.', which is dated 1822 in pencil.[8]

The mansion house is identified as such on an estate map of 1790. To the north and east of the house were a series of fields - Hither Home Close, Further Home Close, Old Barn Field, Dog Kennel Field, Stack Field, Barr Field, New Field, Dewberry Field, Cornered Fields, Curds Close, and part of Sheppards Close.[9]

By 1907 the estate associated with Mascalls was in the order of 150 acres according to the Home Counties magazine, writing of the house and land as it was in 1907.[10]

Aubrey described the house of Sir William Scawen as it was in 1718. However, it is possible that this is not the building acquired from John Hoskins.

Near the church stands a handsome old house belonging to Sir William Scawen, and behind it a fine garden, adorned with fish-ponds and reservoirs of water, also a long and pleasant walk of orange and lime trees, and a wilderness.[11]



Contemporary descriptions of Carshalton, 1658 & 1723


Carshalton met the approval of John Evelyn, who recorded in his diary entry for September 27, 1658 his visit to Carshalton.

Excellently watered, and capable of being made a most delivious seate, being on the sweet downes, and a ‘champion’ about it, full planted with walnut and cherry trees, which afford a considerable rent[12]

Daniel Defoe visited Carshalton some sixty-five years after Evelyn and found a prosperous county village with some distinctly upmarket homes

...a county village situate amongst innumerable springs of water which all together form a river in the very street of the town...crowded by the houses of the citizens of London, some of which are built with such a profession of expense, that they look rather like seats of the nobility, than the county houses of citizens and merchants, particularly those of Sir William Scawen, lately deceased...[13]



Notes


William Cockerell


"[Sir Stephen White will, written in 1678] ITEM I hereby give unto William Cockerell the sonne of the aforesaid Ann Cockerell of Carshalton widdow The some of Two hundred Pounds To be paid unto him by my Executors when the said William shall attaine the age of one and Twenty yeares"[14]



Possible primary sources


TNA

PROB 5/799 LONGE, Dixey, esq, [of Carshalton, Surrey] [Registered will: PROB 11/315] 1664
PROB 5/2148 WAKELIN, William, of Carshalton, Surrey (includes account) 1684

PROB 11/315 Bruce 97-143 Will of Dixye Long of Carshalton, Surrey 12 September 1664
PROB 11/381 Cann 108-165 Will of David Otgher, Gentleman of Carshalton, Surrey 07 November 1685
PROB 11/500 Barrett 45-88 Will of James Kendall of Saint Margaret Westminster, Middlesex 13 July 1708 PROB 11/504 Barrett 223-261
Sentence of James Kendall, Colonel of Carshalton, Surrey 10 December 1708

PROB 18/18/25 Probate lawsuit Walker v Clarke and Otghar, concerning the deceased Elizabeth Clarke of Carshalton, Surrey. Allegation, interogatory and additional statement 1686



Possible secondary sources

  1. William Ellis, XXXX
  2. This is the footnote text
  3. London Archaeology (2004, Spring)
  4. This is the footnote text
  5. This is the footnote text
  6. London Archaeology (2004, Spring)
  7. James Edward, XXXX
  8. Surrey History Centre, XXXX
  9. This is the footnote text
  10. Home Counties magazine, issue ? (XXXX, 1907, p. ?
  11. John Aubrey, XXXX
  12. John Evelyn, XXXX
  13. Daniel Defoe, XXXX
  14. Sir Stephen White will