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Somerhill House

Somerhill House (/ˈsʌmərhɪl hs/) is a Grade I listed Jacobean mansion situated near Tonbridge, Kent, United Kingdom. It was built for The 4th Earl of Clanricarde in 1611–13. The estate was sequestrated by Parliament in 1645, and restored to its rightful owner in 1660. The building had become derelict by the mid-eighteenth century but was later restored. Somerhill was painted by Turner in 1811. It was bought by a member of the Goldsmid family in 1849 and greatly extended between 1879 and 1897, making it the second largest house in Kent, after Knole House, Sevenoaks.

Somerhill
Somerhill House, June 2006
Location of Somerhill within Kent
Former namesSomer Hill
Summerhill
Summer Hill
General information
Architectural styleJacobean
AddressSomerhill, Tonbridge, Kent, TN11 0NJ
Town or cityTudeley, Kent
CountryUnited Kingdom
Coordinates51°10′59″N 0°18′00″E / 51.18306°N 0.30000°E / 51.18306; 0.30000
Current tenantsThe Schools at Somerhill
Construction started1611
Completedc1613
Renovated1879–97, 1988–91
OwnerThe Schools at Somerhill Charitable Trust
Technical details
Floor countThree
Design and construction
Architect(s)John Thorpe
Renovating team
Architect(s)Fielden and Mawson (1988–91)
Renovating firmR. Durtnell & Sons, Brasted (1988–91)

Somerhill housed a Prisoner of War camp, Prisoner of War Camp No. 40, during the Second World War, following which it became the home of the d'Avigdor-Goldsmids and was visited by many celebrities of the time. Somerhill was sold by the d'Avigdor-Goldsmids in 1980, and again went into decline, being damaged by vandalism and storms. In 1993, The Schools at Somerhill moved in, as of February 2024 the building is used as a school.

Location edit

Somerhill House lies 1+12 miles (2.4 km) south of Tonbridge at grid reference TQ 6086 4510,[1] in the civil parish of Tudeley-cum-Capel,[2] which falls under Tunbridge Wells Borough Council.[3]

Description edit

Somerhill is built of sandstone. The stone also contains iron, which gives it a red colour.[4] This stone is known as Calverley Stone.[2] The house is in the shape of a letter "H", with the main hall forming the bar of the "H". The main elevation of the house faces west.[4] The building is three storeys high, with a half-basement. It has five gables on the main elevation. The roof is of an A-frame construction, clad in Kentish peg tiles.[2] The south wing houses the library,[2] the second longest room in Kent at 93 feet (28 m) long, exceeded only by the Gallery at Knole House, Sevenoaks.[3] The main staircase is in the south wing. The north wing housed service rooms and the kitchen, with a parlour at the rear.[2]

As built, the house measured almost 100 feet (30 m) in depth internally.[5] The hall measures 23 feet (7.0 m) by 47 feet (14.3 m). To its north was a 22 feet (6.7 m) by 25 feet (7.6 m) drawing room. The dining room, located to the right of the hall measured 22 feet (6.7 m) by 33 feet (10 m).[5] As extended, Somerhill provides around 49,000 square feet (4,600 m2) of floorspace.[6]

The house shows the transition from medieval architecture, in which the hall was the main living and entertaining room, to the more modern plan, where the hall became a reception room. Somerhill is one of the earliest examples of this.[2] When built, this was an innovative design.[3]

History edit

17th century edit

The land that Somerhill was built on originally formed part of the estate of South Frith, one of two deer parks in the Lowey of Tonbridge.[7] At one time the estate covered 6,500 acres (2,600 ha).[3] Built on the site of an earlier mansion,[8] and designed by John Thorpe, the house was built between 1611 and 1613,[9] dates which are to be found on the surviving leaden rainwater heads.[10] Somerhill was built for The 4th Earl of Clanricarde, an Anglo-Irish nobleman.[11] The design was based on that of the Villa Valmarana, Lisiera, Italy, which was designed by Palladio.[2]

Lord Clanricarde died in 1636, and Somerhill passed to his son Ulick, 5th Earl of Clanricarde, who was created The 1st Marquess of Clanricarde in 1646.[12] Following the Battle of Naseby in 1645, Somerhill was sequestrated by Parliament, which gave it to The 3rd Earl of Essex, the half-brother of Ulick, Lord Clanricarde.[13] On his death in September 1646, Parliament gave Somerhill to John Bradshaw. John Evelyn, who visited Somerhill on 29 May 1652, described Somerhill as "situated on an eminent hill, with a park, but has nothing else extraordinary".[14]

Following the Restoration of Charles II to the throne in 1660, Somerhill was given to Margaret, Viscountess Muskerry, the daughter of The 1st Marquess of Clanricarde.[15] Lady Muskerry had extravagant tastes, and gradually sold off much of the lands of South Frith to various people.[16] She died in 1698, and Somerhill passed to her son, John Villiers, who styled himself the Earl of Buckingham. Villers sold the Manor of South Frith to one Dekins. Some 1,200 acres (490 ha) of grounds was sold separately to Abraham Hill of Sutton at Hone, Kent. Somerhill itself had been let to a warrener.[17]

18th century edit

Dekins sold Somerhill to one Cave, who sold it in 1712 to John Woodgate of Penshurst. Woodgate lived in the house, and on his death it passed to his son Henry,[18] who lived at Somerhill until 1769,[19] and then within the town of Tonbridge until his death in 1787.[18] On 5 August 1752, the house was visited by Horace Walpole, who described its setting as commanding "a vast landscape, beautifully wooded and has quantities of large old trees to shelter itself".[3] By 1766, Somerhill was in a "ruinous" state.[20] It was to remain derelict throughout the century.[9] In 1787, Somerhill passed to William Woodgate, who was Henry Woodgate's nephew and had been living at Somerhill.[18] In 1792, Woodgate was one of three partners who set up The Tonbridge Bank.[21]

19th century edit

In the spring of 1810, J. M. W. Turner made a drawing of Somerhill,[22][23] and then in 1811 he painted it for the Woodgates, choosing a view across the lake in the grounds, with the house in the distance. The painting, which was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1811, is now in the National Galleries of Scotland, and the sketchbook containing his earlier drawing is at the Tate.[23]

Following the end of the Napoleonic Wars and the subsequent agricultural depression,[3] coupled with the collapse of the Tonbridge Bank in 1812, Woodgate was declared bankrupt in 1816.[24] In that year, Woodgate offered Somerhill for sale to the Duke of Wellington, who declined to buy it as the foxhunting was not good enough for his liking.[3] Somerhill was bought from the descendants of William Woodgate in November 1819 by James Alexander, MP.[10] By 1830, Somerhill had been substantially repaired, and new landscaping was undertaken.[11] In 1832, Anthony Salvin was engaged to make improvements to the house, but retaining its original style.[5] During the severe winter of 1835–36, skating was possible on the lake at Somerhill for four weeks.[25]

In 1842, Tonbridge Priory was demolished to make way for the building of the first railway station. A stone coffin from the priory was bought by Alexander and taken to Somerhill,[26] where it can still be seen.[27] In 1849, Somerhill was bought by Sir Isaac Goldsmid, who passed it on to his son Frederick in 1859.[3]

The lake at Somerhill, which Turner had painted in 1811, was used to supply ice for the house, as a watering place for the estate's cattle, and for recreational boating. The lake was fed by the Calverley Stream, which flowed through the grounds of Somerhill. In 1860, the stream became polluted by sewage discharged upstream from a sewage works owned by the Tunbridge Wells Improvement Commissioners, rendering the water in the lake unfit for use. Frederick Goldsmid tried to get the Commissioners to stop fouling the stream, but they refused to act and the situation worsened. Finally, in 1865, Goldsmid sued the Commissioners. They denied responsibility, claiming that the pollution was not caused by their sewage works but by a farm downstream. The court rejected their claim and ruled in Goldsmid's favor.[28]

In 1866, Somerhill passed to Frederick's son Sir Julian Goldsmid (later known as d'Avigdor-Goldsmid[29]).[3] Sir Julian returned the house to something nearer its original condition.[9] In 1879, Somerhill was extended as more room was needed to accommodate Goldsmid's large family – he had eight daughters.[3] The stable courtyard was rebuilt at this time, with the date 1879 being cast in the rainwater heads.[2] The building work took until 1897 to complete. The expansion made Somerhill the second largest house in Kent, after Knole House, Sevenoaks. Somerhill House itself covers an area of 2½ acres (1 ha).

A ghost in the form of a lady in white is said to haunt the Julian staircase, located in the Victorian part of the house.[3] D'Avigdor-Goldsmid allowed people to drive their carriages through the grounds of Somerhill,[29] although the house was not open to the public.[30] Sir Julian died in 1896,[31] and Somerhill passed to Sir Osmond d'Avigdor-Goldsmid.[3]

20th century edit

 
Memorial window to Sarah d'Avigdor-Goldsmid in All Saints Church, Tudeley

In 1912, there was an army camp held in the grounds of Somerhill. The soldiers were housed in bell tents. On Sir Osmond's death in 1940, it then passed to his eldest son Sir Henry. During the Second World War, Somerhill was the site of a Prisoner of War camp, known as POW Camp No. 40.[3] Italian POWs were amongst those housed at Somerhill.[32] The Army were in possession of Somerhill from 1940 to 1949. Squatters occupied some of the 40-plus huts in 1948, they were locked in by the Colonel in charge of the camp at the time.[3]

Post-war, the house was the scene of much lavish entertaining. Lady Rosemary d'Avigdor-Goldsmid likened it to a hotel, "except that the guests didn't pay!" Amongst the distinguished visitors were John Betjeman, Hugh Casson, David Niven and Enoch Powell.[3] The house was listed on 20 October 1954. It is assessed as Grade I.[2] On 19 September 1963,[33] the d'Avigdor-Goldsmid's daughter Sarah was drowned in an accident,[3] which occurred off Rye, East Sussex.[34] Artist Marc Chagall was commissioned to design a set of stained glass windows in All Saints' Church, Tudeley, in her memory.[3]

In 1976, Somerhill passed to Sir Henry's surviving daughter Chloe, who lived at Hadlow Place Farm, Hadlow. She sold Somerhill in 1981 and it was sold thrice more in the next eight years. A sale of the contents of Somerhill was held by Sotheby's on 23 and 24 June 1981.[35] It was bought by Mr and Mrs Watts who opened it for weddings parties etc. Somerhill was advertised for sale in May 1984 at a price in excess of £1,500,000.[6] Beginning in 1988,[2] the house was extensively restored with assistance from English Heritage. The works were undertaken by R. Durtnell & Sons of Brasted, who celebrated their 400th anniversary in 1991 with a party held at Somerhill as the restoration was completed.[3] Fielden and Mawson were the architects for the work.[2]

In 1993, The Schools at Somerhill moved to Somerhill House, having previously been at Tunbridge Wells.[3] The Schools at Somerhill comprise three schools in one location. Somerhill Pre-Prep is for boys and girls aged 3 – 6. Derwent Lodge is for girls aged 6 – 11 and Yardley Court is for boys aged 6 – 13.[36] In 1998, the attic rooms were converted to provide classrooms and art room. A former granary has also been converted to classrooms, whilst some stables have been converted to workshops. Also in that year, a bridge over the lake in the grounds of Somerhill was added to the Buildings at Risk Register by Tunbridge Wells Borough Council, in whose area Somerhill falls. In 2000, the central span between the old stable courtyard and the stable courtyard was reinstated at a cost of £720,000 to provide accommodation for Somerhill Pre-Prep School and administrative offices. Also in that year, planning permission was granted for the building of a sports hall on the top sports terrace.[3]

21st century edit

The reinstated central span opened in January 2001. The new sports hall was completed in 2002 at a cost of £1,400,000. An artificial turf pitch was added in 2003. In 2004, the bridge over the lake was repaired at a cost of £170,000, aided by a grant of £32,000 from Tunbridge Wells Borough Council.[3] In 2006, planning permission was granted for the conversion of the walled garden into a dining hall and indoor swimming pool. Work began the next year and was completed in January 2009.[3] The dining room and swimming pool were given a Design Award by Tonbridge Civic Society in 2009.[37] As a working school, Somerhill House is not normally open to the public. It has been open as part of Heritage Open Days. Somerhill House was open in 2006,[38] and also in 2010.[39] The grounds of Somerhill contain 152 acres (62 ha) of land.[3]

Listed buildings edit

The table below shows the status of the various listed buildings in the grounds of Somerhill House.

Description Grade Date of listing Photograph
Somerhill House I.[40] 20 October 1954.[2]  
Bridge over the lake II.[41] 24 August 1990.[41]  
Lake Cottage II.[42] 24 August 1990.[42]  
Terrace Walls and Sunken Lane II.[43] 24 August 1990.[43]  

References edit

  1. ^ Clifford 1830, p. 153.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Somerhill". English Heritage. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Huntingford, Diane (February 2009). (PDF). The Schools at Somerhill. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  4. ^ a b Oswald 1933, p. 41.
  5. ^ a b c Britton 1832, p. 121.
  6. ^ a b Christopher Warman (23 May 1984). "A slab of history, all mods cons and a friendly ghost". Residential Property. The Times. No. 61838. London. col E, p. 28.
  7. ^ Burr 1766, p. 233.
  8. ^ Neve 1933, p. 53.
  9. ^ a b c Oswald 1933, p. 42.
  10. ^ a b Britton 1832, p. 120.
  11. ^ a b Clifford 1830, p. 154.
  12. ^ Colbran 1840, p. 332.
  13. ^ Colbran 1840, pp. 332–333.
  14. ^ Colbran 1840, p. 333.
  15. ^ Colbran 1840, pp. 333–334.
  16. ^ Colbran 1840, p. 334.
  17. ^ Hasted 1798, p. 235.
  18. ^ a b c Hasted 1798, p. 236.
  19. ^ Neve 1933, p. 54.
  20. ^ Burr 1766, p. 234.
  21. ^ Neve 1933, p. 46.
  22. ^ "Somerhill by Turner". Flickr. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  23. ^ a b "Somer Hill, Tonbridge". National Galleries. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
  24. ^ Neve 1933, p. 47.
  25. ^ Neve 1933, p. 360.
  26. ^ "The Priory". Tonbridge Historical Society. Retrieved 26 December 2010.
  27. ^ "The Search for the Priory Coffin". Tonbridge Collectables. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  28. ^ Robertson 1900, p. 95-101.
  29. ^ a b Thomson 1883, p. 173.
  30. ^ Thomson 1883, p. 174.
  31. ^ Dale 1967, p. 159.
  32. ^ (PDF). Leigh and District Historical Society. September 1993. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 June 2012. Retrieved 15 January 2010.
  33. ^ Memorial plaque to Sarah d'Avigdor-Goldsmid (plaque). All Saints Church, Tudeley. c. 1963. Retrieved 28 December 2010.
  34. ^ "All Saints' Tudeley". All Saints’ Tudeley. Retrieved 10 January 2010.
  35. ^ "Salerooms and Antiques". Property. The Times. No. 60955. London. 16 June 1981. col C, p. 21.
  36. ^ "About the Schools at Somerhill". The Schools at Somerhill. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
  37. ^ "Civic Society Design Awards 2009". Tonbridge Civic Society. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  38. ^ "Heritage Weekend – 9 September 2006 – Tonbridge". The Best of Tonbridge. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  39. ^ "Tunbridge Wells Heritage Open Days 2010". Tunbridge Wells Civic Society. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  40. ^ "Monument details, Somerhill". Kent County Council. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  41. ^ a b "Monument details, Lake Bridge". Kent County Council. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  42. ^ a b "Monument details, Lake cottage". Kent County Council. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  43. ^ a b "Monument details, Terrace Walls Around The South And East Sides Of Somerhill Including The Sunken Lane Approximately 5 Metres North Of The Somerhill Stable Yard". Kent County Council. Retrieved 25 March 2013.

Sources edit

  • Britton, John (1832). Descriptive Sketches of Tunbridge Wells and the Calverley Estate. London: John Britton. (p 120, p 121)
  • Burr, Thomas Benge (1766). The History of Tunbridge Wells. Tunbridge Wells: Thomas Benge Burr. (p 233, p 234)
  • Clifford, J (1830). Guide of Tunbridge Wells. Tunbridge Wells: J Clifford. (p 154)
  • Colbran, John (1840). Colbran's New Guide for Tunbridge Wells. Cornhill, London: A H Bailey & Co. (p 332 2011-09-30 at the Wayback Machine, p 333, p 334)
  • Dale, Antony (1967) [1947]. Fashionable Brighton 1820–1860 (2nd ed.). Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Oriel Press Ltd. ISBN 0-85362-028-8.
  • Hasted, Edward (1798). The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, Volume V. Canterbury: W Bristow. (p 235, p 236)
  • Neve, Arthur H (1933). The Tonbridge of Yesterday. Tonbridge: Tonbridge Free Press. (p 46, p 47, p 53, p 54, p 360)
  • Oswald, Arthur (1933). Country Houses of Kent. London: Country Life Ltd. (p 41, p 42)
  • Robertson, Maxwell Alexander (1866). English reports annotated, 1866-1900, Volume 1.
  • Thomson, J Radford (1883). Pelton's Illustrated Guide to Tunbridge Wells. Tunbridge Wells: Richard Pelton. (p 173, p 174)

External links edit

  • Painting of Somerhill by Turner
  • Heritage Open Days website

somerhill, house, grade, listed, jacobean, mansion, situated, near, tonbridge, kent, united, kingdom, built, earl, clanricarde, 1611, estate, sequestrated, parliament, 1645, restored, rightful, owner, 1660, building, become, derelict, eighteenth, century, late. Somerhill House ˈ s ʌ m er h ɪ l h aʊ s is a Grade I listed Jacobean mansion situated near Tonbridge Kent United Kingdom It was built for The 4th Earl of Clanricarde in 1611 13 The estate was sequestrated by Parliament in 1645 and restored to its rightful owner in 1660 The building had become derelict by the mid eighteenth century but was later restored Somerhill was painted by Turner in 1811 It was bought by a member of the Goldsmid family in 1849 and greatly extended between 1879 and 1897 making it the second largest house in Kent after Knole House Sevenoaks SomerhillSomerhill House June 2006Location of Somerhill within KentFormer namesSomer HillSummerhillSummer HillGeneral informationArchitectural styleJacobeanAddressSomerhill Tonbridge Kent TN11 0NJTown or cityTudeley KentCountryUnited KingdomCoordinates51 10 59 N 0 18 00 E 51 18306 N 0 30000 E 51 18306 0 30000Current tenantsThe Schools at SomerhillConstruction started1611Completedc1613Renovated1879 97 1988 91OwnerThe Schools at Somerhill Charitable TrustTechnical detailsFloor countThreeDesign and constructionArchitect s John ThorpeRenovating teamArchitect s Fielden and Mawson 1988 91 Renovating firmR Durtnell amp Sons Brasted 1988 91 Somerhill housed a Prisoner of War camp Prisoner of War Camp No 40 during the Second World War following which it became the home of the d Avigdor Goldsmids and was visited by many celebrities of the time Somerhill was sold by the d Avigdor Goldsmids in 1980 and again went into decline being damaged by vandalism and storms In 1993 The Schools at Somerhill moved in as of February 2024 the building is used as a school Contents 1 Location 2 Description 3 History 3 1 17th century 3 2 18th century 3 3 19th century 3 4 20th century 3 5 21st century 4 Listed buildings 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksLocation editSomerhill House lies 1 1 2 miles 2 4 km south of Tonbridge at grid reference TQ 6086 4510 1 in the civil parish of Tudeley cum Capel 2 which falls under Tunbridge Wells Borough Council 3 Description editSomerhill is built of sandstone The stone also contains iron which gives it a red colour 4 This stone is known as Calverley Stone 2 The house is in the shape of a letter H with the main hall forming the bar of the H The main elevation of the house faces west 4 The building is three storeys high with a half basement It has five gables on the main elevation The roof is of an A frame construction clad in Kentish peg tiles 2 The south wing houses the library 2 the second longest room in Kent at 93 feet 28 m long exceeded only by the Gallery at Knole House Sevenoaks 3 The main staircase is in the south wing The north wing housed service rooms and the kitchen with a parlour at the rear 2 As built the house measured almost 100 feet 30 m in depth internally 5 The hall measures 23 feet 7 0 m by 47 feet 14 3 m To its north was a 22 feet 6 7 m by 25 feet 7 6 m drawing room The dining room located to the right of the hall measured 22 feet 6 7 m by 33 feet 10 m 5 As extended Somerhill provides around 49 000 square feet 4 600 m2 of floorspace 6 The house shows the transition from medieval architecture in which the hall was the main living and entertaining room to the more modern plan where the hall became a reception room Somerhill is one of the earliest examples of this 2 When built this was an innovative design 3 History edit17th century edit The land that Somerhill was built on originally formed part of the estate of South Frith one of two deer parks in the Lowey of Tonbridge 7 At one time the estate covered 6 500 acres 2 600 ha 3 Built on the site of an earlier mansion 8 and designed by John Thorpe the house was built between 1611 and 1613 9 dates which are to be found on the surviving leaden rainwater heads 10 Somerhill was built for The 4th Earl of Clanricarde an Anglo Irish nobleman 11 The design was based on that of the Villa Valmarana Lisiera Italy which was designed by Palladio 2 Lord Clanricarde died in 1636 and Somerhill passed to his son Ulick 5th Earl of Clanricarde who was created The 1st Marquess of Clanricarde in 1646 12 Following the Battle of Naseby in 1645 Somerhill was sequestrated by Parliament which gave it to The 3rd Earl of Essex the half brother of Ulick Lord Clanricarde 13 On his death in September 1646 Parliament gave Somerhill to John Bradshaw John Evelyn who visited Somerhill on 29 May 1652 described Somerhill as situated on an eminent hill with a park but has nothing else extraordinary 14 Following the Restoration of Charles II to the throne in 1660 Somerhill was given to Margaret Viscountess Muskerry the daughter of The 1st Marquess of Clanricarde 15 Lady Muskerry had extravagant tastes and gradually sold off much of the lands of South Frith to various people 16 She died in 1698 and Somerhill passed to her son John Villiers who styled himself the Earl of Buckingham Villers sold the Manor of South Frith to one Dekins Some 1 200 acres 490 ha of grounds was sold separately to Abraham Hill of Sutton at Hone Kent Somerhill itself had been let to a warrener 17 18th century edit Dekins sold Somerhill to one Cave who sold it in 1712 to John Woodgate of Penshurst Woodgate lived in the house and on his death it passed to his son Henry 18 who lived at Somerhill until 1769 19 and then within the town of Tonbridge until his death in 1787 18 On 5 August 1752 the house was visited by Horace Walpole who described its setting as commanding a vast landscape beautifully wooded and has quantities of large old trees to shelter itself 3 By 1766 Somerhill was in a ruinous state 20 It was to remain derelict throughout the century 9 In 1787 Somerhill passed to William Woodgate who was Henry Woodgate s nephew and had been living at Somerhill 18 In 1792 Woodgate was one of three partners who set up The Tonbridge Bank 21 19th century edit In the spring of 1810 J M W Turner made a drawing of Somerhill 22 23 and then in 1811 he painted it for the Woodgates choosing a view across the lake in the grounds with the house in the distance The painting which was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1811 is now in the National Galleries of Scotland and the sketchbook containing his earlier drawing is at the Tate 23 Following the end of the Napoleonic Wars and the subsequent agricultural depression 3 coupled with the collapse of the Tonbridge Bank in 1812 Woodgate was declared bankrupt in 1816 24 In that year Woodgate offered Somerhill for sale to the Duke of Wellington who declined to buy it as the foxhunting was not good enough for his liking 3 Somerhill was bought from the descendants of William Woodgate in November 1819 by James Alexander MP 10 By 1830 Somerhill had been substantially repaired and new landscaping was undertaken 11 In 1832 Anthony Salvin was engaged to make improvements to the house but retaining its original style 5 During the severe winter of 1835 36 skating was possible on the lake at Somerhill for four weeks 25 In 1842 Tonbridge Priory was demolished to make way for the building of the first railway station A stone coffin from the priory was bought by Alexander and taken to Somerhill 26 where it can still be seen 27 In 1849 Somerhill was bought by Sir Isaac Goldsmid who passed it on to his son Frederick in 1859 3 The lake at Somerhill which Turner had painted in 1811 was used to supply ice for the house as a watering place for the estate s cattle and for recreational boating The lake was fed by the Calverley Stream which flowed through the grounds of Somerhill In 1860 the stream became polluted by sewage discharged upstream from a sewage works owned by the Tunbridge Wells Improvement Commissioners rendering the water in the lake unfit for use Frederick Goldsmid tried to get the Commissioners to stop fouling the stream but they refused to act and the situation worsened Finally in 1865 Goldsmid sued the Commissioners They denied responsibility claiming that the pollution was not caused by their sewage works but by a farm downstream The court rejected their claim and ruled in Goldsmid s favor 28 In 1866 Somerhill passed to Frederick s son Sir Julian Goldsmid later known as d Avigdor Goldsmid 29 3 Sir Julian returned the house to something nearer its original condition 9 In 1879 Somerhill was extended as more room was needed to accommodate Goldsmid s large family he had eight daughters 3 The stable courtyard was rebuilt at this time with the date 1879 being cast in the rainwater heads 2 The building work took until 1897 to complete The expansion made Somerhill the second largest house in Kent after Knole House Sevenoaks Somerhill House itself covers an area of 2 acres 1 ha A ghost in the form of a lady in white is said to haunt the Julian staircase located in the Victorian part of the house 3 D Avigdor Goldsmid allowed people to drive their carriages through the grounds of Somerhill 29 although the house was not open to the public 30 Sir Julian died in 1896 31 and Somerhill passed to Sir Osmond d Avigdor Goldsmid 3 20th century edit nbsp Memorial window to Sarah d Avigdor Goldsmid in All Saints Church TudeleyIn 1912 there was an army camp held in the grounds of Somerhill The soldiers were housed in bell tents On Sir Osmond s death in 1940 it then passed to his eldest son Sir Henry During the Second World War Somerhill was the site of a Prisoner of War camp known as POW Camp No 40 3 Italian POWs were amongst those housed at Somerhill 32 The Army were in possession of Somerhill from 1940 to 1949 Squatters occupied some of the 40 plus huts in 1948 they were locked in by the Colonel in charge of the camp at the time 3 Post war the house was the scene of much lavish entertaining Lady Rosemary d Avigdor Goldsmid likened it to a hotel except that the guests didn t pay Amongst the distinguished visitors were John Betjeman Hugh Casson David Niven and Enoch Powell 3 The house was listed on 20 October 1954 It is assessed as Grade I 2 On 19 September 1963 33 the d Avigdor Goldsmid s daughter Sarah was drowned in an accident 3 which occurred off Rye East Sussex 34 Artist Marc Chagall was commissioned to design a set of stained glass windows in All Saints Church Tudeley in her memory 3 In 1976 Somerhill passed to Sir Henry s surviving daughter Chloe who lived at Hadlow Place Farm Hadlow She sold Somerhill in 1981 and it was sold thrice more in the next eight years A sale of the contents of Somerhill was held by Sotheby s on 23 and 24 June 1981 35 It was bought by Mr and Mrs Watts who opened it for weddings parties etc Somerhill was advertised for sale in May 1984 at a price in excess of 1 500 000 6 Beginning in 1988 2 the house was extensively restored with assistance from English Heritage The works were undertaken by R Durtnell amp Sons of Brasted who celebrated their 400th anniversary in 1991 with a party held at Somerhill as the restoration was completed 3 Fielden and Mawson were the architects for the work 2 In 1993 The Schools at Somerhill moved to Somerhill House having previously been at Tunbridge Wells 3 The Schools at Somerhill comprise three schools in one location Somerhill Pre Prep is for boys and girls aged 3 6 Derwent Lodge is for girls aged 6 11 and Yardley Court is for boys aged 6 13 36 In 1998 the attic rooms were converted to provide classrooms and art room A former granary has also been converted to classrooms whilst some stables have been converted to workshops Also in that year a bridge over the lake in the grounds of Somerhill was added to the Buildings at Risk Register by Tunbridge Wells Borough Council in whose area Somerhill falls In 2000 the central span between the old stable courtyard and the stable courtyard was reinstated at a cost of 720 000 to provide accommodation for Somerhill Pre Prep School and administrative offices Also in that year planning permission was granted for the building of a sports hall on the top sports terrace 3 21st century edit The reinstated central span opened in January 2001 The new sports hall was completed in 2002 at a cost of 1 400 000 An artificial turf pitch was added in 2003 In 2004 the bridge over the lake was repaired at a cost of 170 000 aided by a grant of 32 000 from Tunbridge Wells Borough Council 3 In 2006 planning permission was granted for the conversion of the walled garden into a dining hall and indoor swimming pool Work began the next year and was completed in January 2009 3 The dining room and swimming pool were given a Design Award by Tonbridge Civic Society in 2009 37 As a working school Somerhill House is not normally open to the public It has been open as part of Heritage Open Days Somerhill House was open in 2006 38 and also in 2010 39 The grounds of Somerhill contain 152 acres 62 ha of land 3 Listed buildings editThe table below shows the status of the various listed buildings in the grounds of Somerhill House Description Grade Date of listing PhotographSomerhill House I 40 20 October 1954 2 nbsp Bridge over the lake II 41 24 August 1990 41 nbsp Lake Cottage II 42 24 August 1990 42 nbsp Terrace Walls and Sunken Lane II 43 24 August 1990 43 nbsp References edit Clifford 1830 p 153 a b c d e f g h i j k l Somerhill English Heritage Retrieved 8 December 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Huntingford Diane February 2009 SOMERHILL HISTORY PDF The Schools at Somerhill Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 8 December 2010 a b Oswald 1933 p 41 a b c Britton 1832 p 121 a b Christopher Warman 23 May 1984 A slab of history all mods cons and a friendly ghost Residential Property The Times No 61838 London col E p 28 Burr 1766 p 233 Neve 1933 p 53 a b c Oswald 1933 p 42 a b Britton 1832 p 120 a b Clifford 1830 p 154 Colbran 1840 p 332 Colbran 1840 pp 332 333 Colbran 1840 p 333 Colbran 1840 pp 333 334 Colbran 1840 p 334 Hasted 1798 p 235 a b c Hasted 1798 p 236 Neve 1933 p 54 Burr 1766 p 234 Neve 1933 p 46 Somerhill by Turner Flickr Retrieved 8 December 2010 a b Somer Hill Tonbridge National Galleries Retrieved 2 December 2016 Neve 1933 p 47 Neve 1933 p 360 The Priory Tonbridge Historical Society Retrieved 26 December 2010 The Search for the Priory Coffin Tonbridge Collectables Retrieved 8 December 2010 Robertson 1900 p 95 101 sfn error no target CITEREFRobertson1900 help a b Thomson 1883 p 173 Thomson 1883 p 174 Dale 1967 p 159 Leigh in the War 1939 45 PDF Leigh and District Historical Society September 1993 Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2012 Retrieved 15 January 2010 Memorial plaque to Sarah d Avigdor Goldsmid plaque All Saints Church Tudeley c 1963 Retrieved 28 December 2010 All Saints Tudeley All Saints Tudeley Retrieved 10 January 2010 Salerooms and Antiques Property The Times No 60955 London 16 June 1981 col C p 21 About the Schools at Somerhill The Schools at Somerhill Retrieved 26 May 2016 Civic Society Design Awards 2009 Tonbridge Civic Society Retrieved 27 December 2010 Heritage Weekend 9 September 2006 Tonbridge The Best of Tonbridge Retrieved 8 December 2010 Tunbridge Wells Heritage Open Days 2010 Tunbridge Wells Civic Society Retrieved 8 December 2010 Monument details Somerhill Kent County Council Retrieved 25 March 2013 a b Monument details Lake Bridge Kent County Council Retrieved 25 March 2013 a b Monument details Lake cottage Kent County Council Retrieved 25 March 2013 a b Monument details Terrace Walls Around The South And East Sides Of Somerhill Including The Sunken Lane Approximately 5 Metres North Of The Somerhill Stable Yard Kent County Council Retrieved 25 March 2013 Sources editBritton John 1832 Descriptive Sketches of Tunbridge Wells and the Calverley Estate London John Britton p 120 p 121 Burr Thomas Benge 1766 The History of Tunbridge Wells Tunbridge Wells Thomas Benge Burr p 233 p 234 Clifford J 1830 Guide of Tunbridge Wells Tunbridge Wells J Clifford p 154 Colbran John 1840 Colbran s New Guide for Tunbridge Wells Cornhill London A H Bailey amp Co p 332 Archived 2011 09 30 at the Wayback Machine p 333 p 334 Dale Antony 1967 1947 Fashionable Brighton 1820 1860 2nd ed Newcastle upon Tyne Oriel Press Ltd ISBN 0 85362 028 8 Hasted Edward 1798 The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent Volume V Canterbury W Bristow p 235 p 236 Neve Arthur H 1933 The Tonbridge of Yesterday Tonbridge Tonbridge Free Press p 46 p 47 p 53 p 54 p 360 Oswald Arthur 1933 Country Houses of Kent London Country Life Ltd p 41 p 42 Robertson Maxwell Alexander 1866 English reports annotated 1866 1900 Volume 1 Thomson J Radford 1883 Pelton s Illustrated Guide to Tunbridge Wells Tunbridge Wells Richard Pelton p 173 p 174 External links editPainting of Somerhill by Turner Heritage Open Days website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Somerhill House amp oldid 1151652448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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