Building    From 1768 

Pitzhanger Manor

Categories: Property

In records prior to 1800 their names made it is easy to confuse the house that stood here with another which stood at what is now Pitzhanger Park, about a mile to the north.

In 1768, George Dance was commissioned to build a two-storey extension on the south side of the house on the site at the time, and a young apprentice, John Soane, worked on it. Pitzhanger has a watercolour of the, quite plain, house at this time, from the west. All but that extension is now lost.

32 years later, in 1800, the house came up for sale and Soane bought it. By 1804 he had demolished and rebuilt in his unique style much of the older parts of the house, but he retained the south wing, the interior of which was designed in the Adam style. 

However the house was not successful for his family so in 1810 the house and grounds were sold. There were a number of owners till it was purchased by Spencer Horatio Walpole and in 1843 it became home for his wife's four unmarried sisters who moved here from Elm Grove. The last surviving sister, Frederika, died in 1900 aged 95, at which the house was sold by her nephew, Sir Spencer Walpole (SHW's son), to Ealing.

From then until 1984 parts of it at least served as a public library. Following a restoration it can now be visited, indeed should be visited by anyone interested in architecture - it is magnificent.

Sources: Pitzhanger Manor, Wikipedia, the Listing entry.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Pitzhanger Manor

Commemorated ati

John Soane at Pitzhanger

{The slate edging on one side of the drive carries this inscription:} Famous ...

Read More

Other Subjects

Rothschild Buildings

Rothschild Buildings

The full name was Charlotte De Rothschild Dwellings.  Demolished 1973-80 - all but the arch which stood on Thrawl Street and which you can see in this picture.  The picture source covers the histor...

Building, Property, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Lloyd's of London 1928 building

Lloyd's of London 1928 building

Lloyd's first purpose-built premises, at 12 Leadenhall Street. Needing more space Lloyds commissioned the 1958 building, where the Willis building now stands. The 1928 building was demolished to ma...

Building, Property

1 memorial
Marshall-Andrew & Co.

Marshall-Andrew & Co.

Building contractors.

Group, Property

1 memorial
Nicholas Barbon

Nicholas Barbon

Builder and economist, a key figure in the rebuilding of London after the Great Fire. Laid out Essex Street in 1675. Also redeveloped Red Lion Fields and the Temple. It seems he was an extrovert ro...

Person, Architecture, Politics & Administration, Property

1 memorial
Joan Bartlett, O.B.E

Joan Bartlett, O.B.E

Vice President of the National Federation of Housing Associations. Born London. Leading Catholic involved in housing needs.

Person, Property, Religion, Social Welfare

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Empress Matilda / Empress Maud

Empress Matilda / Empress Maud

Maud / Maude / Matilda was the daughter of King Henry I. Married aged 12 to the future Holy Roman Emperor, Henry V, she moved to Germany and then Italy. When her husband died, 1125, her father move...

Person, Royalty, France

1 memorial