Old Battersea House

Old Battersea House viewed from Vicarage Crescent

Old Battersea House is one of the oldest buildings in Battersea, and is Grade II* listed.[1] It was built around 1699,[1] and was once rumoured to have been designed by Sir Christopher Wren.[2][3]

Building

The building was known until the 1930s as Terrace House.[4] It was built for the "naval administrator"[3] Samuel Pett,[5] probably completed in 1699.[4]

Battersea Council almost demolished the house in the 1920s and built St John's estate[6] (now Battersea Village) on the grounds of the house in the 1930s. In 1931 it passed into the possession of novelist Wilhelmina Stirling, who renamed it Old Battersea House.[3] Under her tenure the house served to house her collection of art by her sister, the Pre-Raphaelite painter Evelyn De Morgan, and her Evelyn's husband, the potter William De Morgan.[7][8] This collection is now kept by the De Morgan Foundation.

The building was listed on 28 June 1954[1] and became derelict after Stirling's death in 1965. It was acquired by Malcolm Forbes in 1970,[9] and housed some of his family's valuable art collection until 2011.[10]

References

Coordinates: 51°28′26″N 0°10′35″W / 51.47396°N 0.17639°W / 51.47396; -0.17639

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