Building   

Pitt House

Categories: Property

As Rocque's 1775 map shows, the cluster of houses here is known as North End. British History Online gives the village's history and here is what it says about Pitt House: "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. 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 {possibly including the gateway}, 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 ...

"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. Robarts and Vivian apparently occupied Pitt House... In 1841 Pitt House was occupied by a clergyman who kept a boarding school...

"Pitt House, in 1869 a two-storyed building with a central doorway and a side bay, 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 {1877-1955}. ...

"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."

From Obsessional: "Mr and Mrs Valentine Fleming {Ian Fleming's parents} buy Pitt House, Hampstead Heath (1909). Mrs Fleming buys Turner's House, Cheyne Walk, Chelsea (1923)." Ian was born in 1908 so this suggests that for his first 15 years, while not away at boarding school, he lived in Pitt House.

From the Melbourne Argus, Saturday 27 March, 1926, page 8 : “.. Lord Clarendon .. had a tea party .. to which I went, at Pitt House, Hampstead. This is a charming old house recently bought by the Clarendons… The Great Lord Chatham {Pitt the Elder} lived there for several years during his illness, in close retirement ..”

And we found reference to a second such tea party in 1928. There are also many references to Lord Clarendon's collection of paintings held at Pitt House.

The Bodleian in Oxford holds "Assorted personal papers of Lord Clarendon, including .. historical notes on his home Pitt House, Hampstead".

From the National Archives: "Hampstead MBC. Open Space (Pitt House, Hampstead Heath) Compulsory Purchase Order 1953".

The maps of the area that we have found (1865, 1912, 1957) do not tally with each other in terms of where the buildings were/are so it is difficult to pin Pitt House down precisely.

At its source this photo is captioned "Burglars broke into Pitt House, Hampstead, the home of the Earl of Clarendon, during the night and stole a valuable Van Dyck entitled "Ferdinand the Cardinal." It looks as if the photo was used for a 4 July article in the "E. News" and that their source for the photo was the "Sport and General Agency" which had a date of 1910 on it.

There is another photo, dated 1926 (the top photo) which shows quite a lot of work having taken place since the previous photo.

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:
Pitt House

Commemorated ati

Pitt House Gateway

1882 - not the date of this plaque which is, from the look of it, much more r...

Read More

William Pitt's house

William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, 1708 - 1778, Prime Minister, lived in a house ...

Read More

Other Subjects

Canonbury House, Alwyne Villas

Canonbury House, Alwyne Villas

From British History Online: A house existed here in 1373. We think this was on the site of today's Canonbury Tower, just to the north of today's Canonbury House. "From c. 1770 John Dawes replaced ...

Building, Property

1 memorial
Queensberry House 1797

Queensberry House 1797

Built in the 1740s by the 3rd Earl of Cholmondeley. 1780 it was bought and enlarged by the 4th Duke of Queensberry. Demolished 1830. At source this image is captioned "Print of the Seat of the Duk...

Building, Property

1 memorial
Spurstowe Almshouses

Spurstowe Almshouses

Discover National Archives gives: "Shortly before his death in 1666, the Reverend Dr William Spurstowe, Vicar of Hackney, built six almshouses near Church Street, Hackney, for six ancient widows fr...

Building, Property

2 memorials
West Square

West Square

West Square celebrated its centenary in September 1991. We can do no better than repeat the excellent text that the West Square Residents Association has provided on a notice board at the gate: "T...

Place, Property

1 memorial
St Joseph's Almshouses

St Joseph's Almshouses

Roman Catholic almshouses, funded by Joseph and Mary Knight.   Designed by Pugin, building began in 1847.  24 cottages were planned but only 18 built, in two blocks of 9, at the north-east corner o...

Building, Property, Social Welfare

2 memorials