The Twickenham Museum
Places : Hampton

The Elms
Early 17th century mansion in the High Street
1700

The Elms, High Street, Hampton

The Elms was first known as Maundies, later Elm Lodge. It is now the site of three houses and two bungalows - numbers 69, 73, 73A, 75 & 77, High Street, Hampton.

It was a large 23 room mansion, probably build in the early 17th century but later rebuilt or substantially
altered. The house was burnt down by suffragettes in 1913.

Early 17c Henry and Anne Palmer at Maundies.
House built
1655 Alexander Popham
1673 Sir Francis Popham
John Ireland (d 1684), Kings Master Glazier
1674 5 Hearths
1684 Hannah Ireland (d 1724)
1710 House substantially rebuilt
1724 John Ireland
1726 Penelope Hume (d 1747)
1747 John Hampden
1748 Edward Lovibond (d 1775)
1776 Thomas King
1788 Edward Goldsmith (d 1792)
1792 Rebecca Goldsmith (d 1805)
1805 Jesse Goldsmith
1824 John Goodson
1831 House renamed Elm Lodge
1836 Lady Goodricke (d 1842)
1842 George Francis Barlow (d1847)
1847 George James Howard (d 1911)
1864 Lord Charles Fitzroy (1791-1865), MP
1865 Lady Anne (Cavendish) Fitzroy (1788-1871)
1871 John Grove, surgeon, wife Emma and family
1876 House renamed The Elms
1911 Rosalind, Countess of Carlisle, widow of G J Howard
1913 House burnt down
c. 1915 3 Houses & 2 Bungalows built

back to top