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Holme Lodge was owned by the Shelford
Estate of the Earls of Chesterfield and later, through marriage,
the Earls of Carnarvon. In 1925 the estate passed to the Crown
in lieu of estate duty following the death of the fifth Earl
of Carnarvon in 1923.
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The lodge was supposedly built
as a hunting lodge and is said to have been used by
the Earl's agent. Certainly there are photographs from
the time of large hunting parties and the Earls are
known to have hunted here. In his memoirs the sixth
Earl writes of hunting in Bingham in about 1925 and
staying at the Station Hotel, Nottingham, with friends.
A private chapel was built in the grounds and used by
the estate workers.
It was actually built for the Earl's
estate manager. C Kenrick Jones was the manager in 1896
and 1900 but tantalisingly the directories do not say
where he or the estate office could be found. Later
directories do record two agents in residence - William
Henry Pain in 1908 and John Seymour Rutherford in 1922. |
The deeds, as with all former estate
properties, are silent as to the history of the house before
the Crown sold it. The house is listed Grade II and the description
for this suggests a build date of 1831. The elaborate early
nineteenth century iron gate is also highlighted.
The deed papers only go back to the sale
of the house by the Crown Commissioners in 1951. Normally
there would be no record of occupiers before this, but the
deeds to Donkey Green Cottage, opposite offer some clues.
In 1944 a Miss Violet Catherine Pratt-Barlow, of Holme Lodge,
bought Donkey Green's Cottage, but for what purpose it is
not clear. A lady resident of Bingham remembers the cottage
being derelict, but is not sure when. Miss Pratt-Barlow continued
to live at Holme Lodge until her death in 1951. We have no
knowledge of who she was or how long she had lived at Holme
Lodge before 1944.
After she died the Crown sold Holme Lodge
for £1100 to Sir Douglas McCraith, a Nottingham solicitor
who lived at Normanton Grange, Plumtree. This fits the pattern
we have observed, that the Crown sold only after the death
of a tenant and never to the tenant (who would have had the
right to a lower price). The plans show the road as Long Acre,
the East must have been added later. Parcel 247 seems to have
been an orchard, which were common in Bingham at the time.
Interestingly, Sir Douglas' wife, Lady Phyllis, had bought
Donkey Green's Cottage two months earlier, but never seemed
to have lived there. This purchase is recorded in the supplemental
abstract of title, 1955, but is not recorded in the bundle
of deeds for the cottage. She did live at Holme Lodge, and
local folklore has it that Sir Douglas remained at Normanton
Grange. She was said to have been keen on horse racing and
her jockey is thought to have lived over the stables in the
barn on the corner of Dark Lane. Maybe he used Donkey Green's
Cottage.
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When the estate transferred
to the Crown, the Earl of Carnarvon had reserved the
mineral rights below 600 ft in respect of the whole
estate. He had full power to search for and work minerals
but could only access them from existing underground
workings. An interesting covenant imposed by the Crown
is that the premises shall be used only for private
purposes, so no hotel conversions could be considered.
Sir Douglas died on 16 September
1952. In August 1955 his executors, one of whom was
Lady Phyllis, sold Holme Lodge and Donkey Green's Cottage
to Henry Perry Griffin of Old Mill House, Lowdham, company
director. He was a director of the Nottingham department
store Griffin and Spalding, later to become Debenhams.
He paid £7500 for a total of 2.73 acres. |
A small plot of land east of Dark Lane
on the corner with Long Acre East (marked X on the plan above)
and not shown on the plan attached to the sale documents for
1955 had been added as conveyance from the Crown to Griffin
on 6 July 1959. Griffin sold this plot of 0.43 acres to Enid
Winifred Stewart on 20 August 1959 for £807.1.0d. No18
was built on this plot. It is actually an engulfed cottage
- the modern house has an old cottage at its core. The barn
has since been converted to a house (No18a).
On 31 December 1964 Griffin sold the
land to the rear of Holme Lodge to Hericon developments, to
build the bungalows of Perry Grove. The house itself with
some land was sold to John Raymond Sail as sub-purchaser,
of 14 Market Place Bingham. This sale included the garage
of Donkey Green Cottage. The garage of Donkey Green Cottage
was sold to the owner of the cottage in 1988 and Holme Lodge
was sold to the present owners in 1998. Mr and Mrs Sail retained
some garden including the old chapel, on which to build a
bungalow.
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