LOST HOSPITALS OF LONDON | |||
Shrewsbury
House
(Crole-Wyndham Home) Shrewsbury Lane
(later, Bushmoor Crescent), Shooters Hill,
SE18 3EG |
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Medical
dates:
Medical
character:
|
1890s - 1915 Convalescent |
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The original house was built in
1789 for John Talbot, 16th
Earl of Shrewsbury, but ten years later was leased to the Prince
Regent to accommodate his 3-year-old daughter, Princess
Charlotte, under the care of the Dowager Duchess of Elgin,
following the breakdown of his marriage.
In 1851 the building became a boarding school. In 1879 it became the Crole-Wyndham Memorial Convalescent Home for Children with 35 beds. In 1908 the LCC leased part of the Home's grounds for use as an Open-Air School for 75 'delicate' children. The Home moved to Herne Bay, Kent, in 1915 and, in the following year, the property was sold to a local dignitary, Frederick Halse. Present status (May 2012) In 1923 Mr Halse built a new mansion, also named Shrewsbury House, a little to the south of the original, which was demolished in 1925. The northern part of the extensive grounds of the House was purchased by the LCC in 1928 and became a public park - Shrewsbury Park. The remainder of the land was taken up for housing, in particular the Shrewsbury Park Estate, built by John Laing & Sons in a Garden City style during the 1930s. The southern part of the grounds was built over as Bushmoor Crescent, Ashbridge Crescent and Mereworth Drive. In 1929, when the lease on the land expired, the LCC's Open Air School moved to Charlton Park. In 1933 the new Shrewsbury House was purchased by Woolwich Borough Council for £9,000 for use as a library and a museum (the latter was never realised). During and after WW2 the House was used as a Civil Defence Control Centre. In 1968 it became a community centre. |
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The current walls and gates of Shrewsbury House were probably built in 1923. The estate drive ran originally from the corner of the present Shrewsbury Lane and Eaglesfield Road. The 1923 Grade II listed building is now Shrewsbury House Community Centre. The garden to the north of the current Shrewsbury House is close to the site of the original house. A rock garden reputedly incorporates masonry from the old house. Shrewsbury Park, to the north of Shrewsbury House. An old tree is preserved at the junction of the new roads. In 1912 a new LCC Fire Station was built on the site of the original drive and lodge of Shrewsbury House. It closed in the early 1980s. The building has now been converted into an apartment block - The Old Fire Station. |
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References (Accessed
16th September 2013) http://e-shootershill.co.uk http://shrewsburyhouse.org www.londongardensonline.org.uk www.shrewsburyhouse.info www.shrewsburyhouse.org www.subbrit.org.uk |
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