|
The various sale and mortgage deeds in
the papers for 31 Long Acre East recall a number of well known
Bingham family names we have met in other research. East Cottage
is on a small part of what was a five acre enclosure (probably
of pasture) called Parr’s Close. This was owned for
the early part of the nineteenth century by a family of cottagers
and graziers called Chettle. In 1837 it was split into various
plots and sold. The plot which became East Cottage was sold
to George Shepherd. The Swanwick farming family bought the
plot to the west, which was eventually sold to a bricklayer
who built Oak Villa in 1910.
East Cottage was built in 1880 by or
on behalf of John Bales (or more probably Bates) a police
constable. However the date stone for 1880, on the east gable
wall, carries the letters JW. Bates sold the cottage in 1881
and it was let to various tenants over the next few years
including William Goodacre, a landscape artist who had spent
three years in America teaching, painting and exhibiting.
He had returned to Britain in 1826 and was proprietor of a
boarding school in Nottingham until retiring in 1881 to East
Cottage. His widow ran a school at the cottage for a couple
of years around 1885.
It was purchased in 1887 by a wealthy
lace designer who was living here in 1891 in retirement (aged
59) with his unmarried daughters and eventually left his various
properties, investments and insurances to his extended family
under complex trust arrangements. One of his granddaughters
was a masseuse in London in the 1930s!
The later ownership of the house has
been more straightforward.
East Cottage and Oak Villa, next door,
are built on parts of a piece of land known then as Parr’s
Close.
Chettle’s son, known as William Chettle Senior, a farmer
of Bingham, had inherited the close at some point and on 2nd
January 1837 (the first deed document available) sold part
of the close to George Shepherd, yeoman of Bingham. The price
was £126 and the piece was described as:
All that piece or parcel of land
lying and being in Bingham containing by recent admeasurement
two roods and two perches (about half an acre) bounded on
the south by the town street called Long Acre, on the east
by a lane called Coggles Lane and on the north and west
by other parts of the said close lately purchased by William
Johnson and William Sills respectively of the said William
Chettle
The agreement of 1837 prevented any (future)
wife of George Shepherd claiming dower out of the premises
thus ensuring the property would pass to any heirs of George
Shepherd, by whichever wife he might have in the future! This
was not an uncommon device in other documents we have seen
– presumably designed to stop a widow taking the late
husband’s property into a new alliance and cutting out
any children.
A George Shepherd is recorded in directories
of 1853 and again 1864 as a cottager in Moor Lane. He is in
the 1841 census (but as Sheppards) as a 35 year old cottager
on the west side of Moor Lane. However he had a wife, Elizabeth
and five children one of whom was aged 9 which would mean
this George was married at the time of the sale in 1837! A
slight complication to the story but the censuses of 1841
and 1851 contain no other George Shepherds! It is probably
a legal catch-all phrase to include present or future wives.
On the same date, 2nd January 1837, George
Shepherd borrowed £130 from William Pacey, Farmer of
Bingham and and John Pacey, farmer of Barnstone, using the
property as security. Interest was 4.5% pa. William Pacey
occupied the farmhouse now known as Beauvale House, at that
time part of the Earl of Chesterfield’s Shelford Estate
– see Cromwell House.
The land is described as previously occupied by Chettle (so
he had used it as part of his farming activities) but now
by Shepherd.
On the reverse of the mortgage document
a receipt for the money was witnessed by John Horsepoole and
William Sills. Sills had bought the plot next door (now no.
29). John Horsepool is listed in 1832 as a farmer of Long
Acre; he also had a butcher’s in the Market Place. James
Horsepool had a butcher’s shop and lived at No 19
Church Street around the same time. His son John Horsepool
lived at 19 Church Street in the 1840s and may be the same
John who witnessed the receipt. Unfortunately, as John inherited
19 Church Street from his father and passed it onto his widow,
we have no signature from those deeds to compare.
The mortgage asset passed through various
Paceys until William’s grandson John Pacey died, at
which point all his assets were sold and the loan called in
by his executors. They sold the property for £233 on
12 July 1880 to John Bales of Bingham, police constable. The
mortgage was still outstanding so the principal (£130)
was repaid and George Shepherd, described as cottager of Bingham,
received the balance (£103). He signed with his mark.
 |
The property was now described
as
Two roods and two perches,
Long Acre to south, Coggles Lane to East and hereditaments
late of William Johnson and William Sills but now of
(no names entered)
And also that messuage or dwelling house with
the outbuildings belonging thereto recently erected
by said John Bales upon the said piece of land
or upon some part thereof. |
Thus John Bales may have leased the land
to build a house before completing the purchase of the land
– a not uncommon practice. There would probably have
been either by an agreement to lease in the future (see 9
Newgate Street) or a full blown lease (see 12
Church Steet) but neither is now present in the bundle
of deeds. This is the first mention of a house in connection
with the property. The east gable wall of East Cottage carries
a builder’s stone dated 1880 with the initials JW.
Two possibilities arise to explain the
initials JW where one would have expected JB as the owner.
A John Wall is recorded in the 1879 directory as a cottager
of Long Acre and the building of the house has in the past
been attributed to him. But he was already a cottager in Long
Acre in 1871, well before the date of the house. Why would
he have needed to move house? A more plausible explanation
might be that the initials are of a speculative builder who
put his own initials up, possibly before finding a purchaser.
If so it could have been John Wood, described in the 1881
census as a 49 year old builder employing one man and living
in East Street. Bales would not, in this case, have leased
the land prior to building and the deed may not quite mean
what it says.
The next day, 13 July 1880, Bales took
out a mortgage with Miss Helen (Ellen in the deeds corrected
to Helen) Huckerby, spinster of Bingham, who lent him £300
@4.5% with the usual repossession arrangements. In the 1881
census Ellen Huckerby was aged 65, described as an annuitant
(so she had money) and was a lodger with the baker Frederick
Hemstock of Market Place (possibly 11a which has an old bakery
in the cellar). She and her sister Elizabeth had run a grocery
shop in the Market Place. Their brother was William Huckerby
the younger who owned Cromwell House and was a lawyer, superintendent
registrar and secretary of the Gas Company. She loaned Bales
a further £35 on 29 July 1880.
Bales stayed less than a year before
selling the property on 24 June 1881 to Henry Edward Hunt,
gentleman (he was a solicitor) of Nottingham for £460,
out of which Hunt retained the amounts owing (£300,
together with £6-13-10d interest thereon from 30/1/1881)
to pay off the mortgage. Bales got the residue of £124-6-2.
It would seem Bales was falling behind in his repayments.
There is no record of John Bales in the
census of 1881 but we have traced a policeman called Bates
in that census; either Bates or Bales may be a mispelling.
He lived in Market Street:
John Bates 30 Occ: Police Constable
Amy M. Bates Wife 25
Hunt must have bought the house as an
investment property as it is ‘now (i.e. before the sale)
in the occupation of William Goodacre’. In the 1881
census William Goodacre
is listed as a retired Landscape Artist, aged 77, living in
Long Acre. If Goodacre was already the occupant, it would
explain why Bates was living in Market Street at the time
of the census, a few months earlier than the sale date.
Hunt was fairly slow repaying the mortgage,
which on 23 March 1882 Hellen Huckerby transferred the mortgage
to Arthur Williams, of Nottingham, gentleman. The documents
were endorsed 6 October 1882 by Williams to say he had received
£45-3-2 from Hunt on account. A further payment of £250-0-0
was received on 19 January 1883 and the mortgage finally paid
off on 28 December 1880.
 |
These documents identify William
Marson (?) and (no forename) Swanwick as owners of properties
to the North and West respectively.
Six years later, on 31 January
1887 Henry Hunt sold the property for £350 to
Charles Harvey Bolton, lace designer, of Radcliffe on
Trent. The property was described as being previously
in the occupation of Bales, thereafter William Goodacre
then Elizabeth Goodacre and late of Samuel Hall.
The property description in the 1887 documents is unchanged,
including the area of two roods and two perches, and
the present Cogley lane is still referred to as Coggles
Lane. The owner of the land to the west is now identified
as Samuel Swanwick. |
On 7 February 1891 Bolton took out a
Mortgage with the Nottingham Permanent Benefit Building Society
(incorporated under Building Societies Act 1874) for £100.
He is recorded as living here in the 1891 census as a 59 year
old retiree living on his own means with his two unmarried
daughters. He repaid the mortgage on 15 November 1893. The
mortgage document notes that Bolton now occupied the cottage.
Bolton died on 4 March 1898 in residence
at East Cottage. He left the house to his three unmarried
daughter(s) for as long as they remained unmarried, which
they all did. Had they all married the rents were to go to
his married daughter Kate Emma Sims, so she never received
any! He also made various arrangements to come into effect
after her death for the other daughters (two of whom survived
her) and for the surviving children of his son Charles Alfred.
These latter became Helen Maud Tildsley and Annie Christine
Dufty.
Helen Maud Tildesley was ‘otherwise
and professionally known as Helen Maud Bolton of 25 Litchfield
Street London WC6, masseuse’, which conjures up all
sorts of visions!
In 1908 East Cottage was tenanted by
a Miss A Yates, described in the directory as a market gardener.
The sisters borrowed £350 at 6.5%
interest from Frederick George Ainsworth Wyatt, 8 Villa Road,
Nottingham, professor of music. In 1936 the property was assigned
to W R Greenland. At this time East Cottage was in the occupation
of a Mrs Wright. Bolton’s grandchildren Helen Maud died
in 1939 and Annie Christina in 1940. The trustees of the Bolton
estate conveyed (sold) the property to Greenland in May 1940.
He died in 1941 and in 1942 his widow sold East Cottage for
£500 to Mrs Joan Murden, wife of John Francis Murden
of The Cottage, Clifton, Company Director
In 1942 the documents note that the northerly
portion was occupied formerly by William Johnson but now by
an unnamed entity. The land on the westerly side (next door
number 29) formerly owned by Joseph Swanwick was now occupied
by C H Thompson whose father had built Number 29 in 1910.
At some point the northern plot came into the ownership of
the Shelford Estate, now owned by the Crown Estate –
vide the crown tied-houses built here now. This may have happened
in 1942 or possibly 1880 (lack of names of adjacent occupiers).
The Earl of Carnarvon may have added to his existing holding
to the west of Parr’s Close.
Later, Mrs Murden sold to John
Hopkinson but there are no papers recording the date of this.
His father and then he owned a butcher’s shop in the
Market Place, now part of the Handicentre and he used to rent
Crow Close to run his own cattle, much as past generations
of butchers such as John Horsepool had done in the 1850s.
Hopkinson sold to the Summers in 1993 and they sold to the
present owners in 2003. |