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Around 1897 James Walker, local farmer turned builder,
built two pairs of semi-detached cottages on the corner of Cherry Street
and Church Street. Number 12 is one of them. He leased a plot of land
from the Earl of Carnarvon for £7-10-0 per annum for a period of
99 years from 25th March 1895. The plan indicates and the lease (not written
until 23 March 1897), refers to already existing buildings. The wording
and the attached plan suggest this was one house fronting directly onto
Church Street:
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All that ground containing one rood and nine
perches delineated on the plan
together with the messuage
or dwelling house and other buildings thereon
'
Alternatively it might have been a row of
cottages with some facing Cherry Street. But the plan shows no internal
divisions.
The plan shows the surrounding land mainly
in the ownership of Lord Carnarvon, but properties opposite were
largely in private hands. Interestingly it seems the Earl still
owned number 21 and Seymour Cottage (number 16). He had inherited
from his mother, who was the daughter of the 6th Earl of Chesterfield
who owned much of Bingham in the 19th century. The estate passed
to her on the death of her brother the 7th Earl in 1871.
One provision of the lease was
that Walker would insure the messuage for £800, indicating
a substantial building. Might this have been the original post office
and school run by John Strong from 1795 to 1850 rather than Seymour
Cottage as local word has it? This house would have been considerably
larger than Seymour Cottage and therefore perhaps more appropriate
to that use. At the time of the lease it may have been near derelict
as Walker clearly intended to build on the plot. |
Walker demolished the existing building to build
two pairs of houses, numbers 8&10, and 12&14 Church Street. Two
months after signing the lease and after building the houses, on 19 May
1897 he took out a mortgage with Robert Halford JP, of Nottingham for
£500 at 4½%pa. The mortgage document refers to
'All that plot of ground...and also
those four messuages or dwelling houses erected by the mortgagor (Walker)
upon the said ground (certain old buildings formerly thereon having
been pulled down)'.
So it was a brownfield site!
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It is interesting to note the mortgage was
agreed after the houses had been built, so Walker must have financed
their construction by other means. The respective dates of the lease
and mortgage suggest a build date of April/May 1987. However we
have seen other deeds where an agreement was made to lease for the
purpose of building a house, but the actual lease was not signed
until the house(s) had been built and the term of the lease backdated
to the date of agreement. No such agreement exists for 12 Church
Street, but may have done. Thus a build date of between 1895 and
1897 is a safer assumption.
On 24th December 1897 Walker assigned the lease
to Thomas Hutchinson of Bingham. Henry Hutchinson (a grocer of Bristol)
was a party to the agreement. The agreement was for the eastern
part of the original plot together with the two houses on it. It
provided for a pedestrian right of way across the rear of 12/14
to the rear of the western pair of houses (8/10) and for a fence
to be erected between the pairs. The price was £400; £150
directly to Walker and £250 to Halford to pay off half of
Walker's mortgage. The ground rent was to be £3-15-0 (half
of the rent for the original plot). |
The assignment also records that Henry Hutchinson
bought the western pair about the same time:
Whereas
(Walker) has also agreed
with the said Henry Hutchinson for the sale to him of the other hereditaments
'
which is why Henry figures on the indenture for
number 14 - to agree fencing etc.
There are several Hutchinsons in the directories
of the time for Bingham, but no Henry. The veterinary surgeon, Ebenezer
had lived in Long Acre (probably Pinchpenny Cottage) until 1881 or thereabouts
and a John Hutchinson is recorded as living in Long Acre in 1896; no occupation
is given. He is listed, without an address, in Kelly's 1900 and 1904 directories.
Thomas Hutchinson is listed for 1900 but not 1904. A Mrs Hutchinson ran
a bakers and confectioners in Church Street in 1896 and is still listed
in 1900 and 1904.
On 16 November 1904 Thomas Hutchinson, described
as gentleman, took out a mortgage with James Herbert Lloyd, chemist of
Radford, and Herbert Edwin Fortescue, solicitor's clerk of Nottingham
for £100 at 4½%. This seems to have been a simple loan arrangement
using the house as security. This document is interesting in two respects.
It identifies occupants of numbers 12 and 14 as Mrs Swinscoe and Mr Towers.
It also identifies Henry Hutchinson as still the owner of the other pair,
numbers 8 and 10:
'Also those two messuages standing in
the grounds...in occupation of Mrs Swinscoe and Mr Towers the wall or
fence separating the premises hereby demised from the premises on the
west belonging to Henry Hutchinson to be party wall or fence and to be
maintained or repaired accordingly'.
In the 1904 Kelly's directory Jarvis Swinscoe is
listed as a coachbuilder, cycle agent and repairer. His premises were
in the Market Place about where Thatchers the hairdressers is now. Might
it have been his mother living here? A Samuel Towers is listed as a private
resident for 1900 and 1904.
On 4th October 1905 Fortescue took over the whole
of the mortgage .
Thomas Hutchinson died 18th June 1907. His executors
were Frederick Hutchinson, schoolmaster of Bingham and Mary Evelyn Hutchinson,
spinster of Bingham, presumably his children. They did not repay the mortgage
until 3rd July 1915.

On 22nd June 1920 the Earl of Carnarvon sold the
freehold to Frederick Hutchinson, of Church Street, for £93-15s
(25 years rent). As noted in other deeds we have seen, the Earl sold a
great many freeholds in 1920, we assume to generate funds for his archaeological
work in Egypt. An agreement signed prior to the actual indenture is on
pre-printed stationery specifically designed for selling Carnarvon owned
freeholds in 1920, with spaces for details of individual properties to
be entered by hand, suggesting a lot were to be sold! As with other similar
sales of freehold the Earl retained the mineral rights. One can presumably
assume the freehold to numbers 8 and 10 would have been sold at the same
time. The freehold sale indenture shows clearly the right of way.
Mary Evelyn is not mentioned in the freehold conveyance
although she continued to have an interest as an executor. By a surrender
agreement of 24th July 1928 she transferred her interest in the property
to Frederick for a consideration of £200. Frederick had already
purchased the freehold of course. Their neighbour F A Richmond, of Church
View, now 19 Church Street opposite, witnessed the agreement!
On 24th July 1952, Frederick Hutchinson, now described
as retired schoolmaster, sold number 14 to Elizabeth Ross of Sheffield.
The property was described as 'the easternmost of a pair of messuages
known as Morgan Villas' - the first mention of this name. The price was
£1200. Hutchinson is 'of Church Street', probably number 12.
When he wrote his will, in January 1959, Frederick
Hutchinson is 'of Morgan Villas' so was clearly living in number 12 at
this time. At his death in August of that year his son John was living
at 79 Forest Road in Nottingham and is described as company director.
On the 22nd December, John Hutchinson sold number 12 for £1450 to
David Newton, another teacher. As was common at that time Newton took
out a mortgage with Bingham Rural District Council, for £1305. He
borrowed further small sums from them for improvements in November 1960
and January 1965. The present owners bought it from him in 1976.
Thus the house has been in the ownership of only
three families since it was built, although there was a period in the
early 1900s where a tenant occupied it.
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