Oatlands Heritage Group

c/o 38 Norman House
Chertsey Road
Shepperton
Middlesex
TW17 9LF

William and Caroline Stephens of Kensington Lodge

william stephens - 1897William Stephens was born in Ladock, Cornwall in 1830 and had become a copper miner by the time of the 1851 census. He is not listed in the next three censuses but records show that he married Caroline at Kingston in 1882. Further investigation revealed that in the intervening thirty years he had become a ship's engineer, gone to South America and made his home in Buenos Aires. He appears to have married Emily Benny (or Binny) in Southampton in 1858, having already fathered a daughter, Elizabeth Ann who was born in Limehouse in 1855. Emily and Elizabeth Ann arrived in Buenos Aires in December 1860. A second daughter, whom he refers to as Lucy (we know little else about her at the moment) died of typhoid fever in Buenos Aires on the 27th of February 1862.

Elizabeth Ann Stephens married Thomas Roberts Cornish in Buenos Aires on the 8th of April 1874 and, after returning to England (to "Lea Croft" on Oatlands Drive), gave birth to a son, William Henry Stephens Cornish in 1876. It's very unclear how Thomas Roberts Cornish came to be in Buenos Aires but, although his occupation was stated as "Insurance Agent" in the 1871 Census for Penzance. He seems to have been working for William Stephens in an engineering capacity and oversaw the construction of a ship in Scotland, which was then transported to Buenos Aires as a 'kit of parts' for assembly at the "Stephens & von Willer" company of which William was part-owner.

Thomas and Elizabeth were back in Buenos Aires when their third child, John Hewitt Martin Cornish, was born in March 1881, but their second, Alice Mary Louisa was born in Oatlands in 1878. Why they went back we can only speculate - William and Emily were still there in February of 1880, when Emily died. William’s time as a widower was relatively brief: by early 1882, he had returned to England and married Caroline. While William had prospered in Argentina, his new wife was considerably richer, as we shall see below. She was also seventeen years older, so no doubt there was plenty of gossip about the marriage!

Caroline was born Caroline Smith in Hambleton, Yorkshire, on the 10th of March 1814, the third daughter of Samuel and Margaret. Samuel was the local Justice of the Peace, a farmer and the owner of considerable amounts of land. The family had been wealthy for several generations, as evidenced by the location of their graves in Brayton Churchyard (Hambleton had no church at that time).

Brayton Church

Caroline married Richard Mathews at the church in Brayton on the 1st of May 1834. Richard was a wealthy land and property owner and they lived initially in Lambeth and later in Clapham. Richard purchased "lot 27" at the public auction of the Oatlands Estate on the 19th of May 1846 and had a house named "The Castle" built there in the early 1850s. The house, which was situated at the Weybridge corner of the junction of Oatlands Chase (then known as Station Road) and Oatlands Drive, was often referred to as "Lobster Castle" by the locals as it had been built with an unusual pink-toned brick.

Richard and Caroline had three daughters between 1835 and 1844. During his time in Oatlands, Richard also acquired significant amounts of land and property in the village. On his death in 1865, Caroline inherited and became even more wealthy - she had already inherited considerable amounts of land and property in Yorkshire when her father had died in 1847. The three daughters also received significant inheritances, a fact that may not be totally unconnected with their all getting married in the latter half of 1866...

Caroline seems to have been a good-natured woman who did a lot to ease the problems of the poor of the district - though this wasn't usually in the form of 'hand-outs'. She was known for sharing what she had, making her land freely available for picnics and school events and turning a blind eye to those who used it to obtain the odd rabbit or hare to help feed their families.

It seems highly probable that William Stephens was in Oatlands in 1876 and, though married to Emily, took rather a shine to Caroline (or her wealth - he was nothing if not an opportunist, we have come to conclude) and Caroline's daughters may have seen their inheritance from their mother as far less than secure. At that time (before the Married Woman's Property Act of 1882) any property she had inherited prior to a marriage would automatically pass to her husband. The daughters, most notably the eldest, Caroline Eleanor who had married Charles Fraser and stood to inherit the lion’s share, began a civil action against their mother in 1876 (we haven't yet completely unravelled this) which wasn't sorted out until about 1901, after William Stephens had died.

transcarolineCaroline died at Kensington Lodge on the 25th of March 1894 and the following year William erected a statue to her in the grounds of the house. This statue still remains in the grounds of Oatlands School but, following restoration by Surrey County Council, is now in a slightly different location and shows Caroline's year of death as 1884, though close inspection reveals the partial outline of the 9 carved into the stone of the base. One of William’s great-great-grandsons visited Oatlands for the first time some years ago. Walking along St Mary’s Road, looking the site of Kensington Lodge, he asked directions of an elderly man working in his front yard. “Oh, it’s where the school now is, just a couple of hundred yards further along. You’ll see a statue of Queen Victoria by the gate!”

William died on the 16th of August 1900 having broken his neck falling down the stairs - the coronor ruled it as "Accidental Death".

Neither William nor Caroline had a son from their first marriages (and no children from their own marriage - she was 67 at the time she married him) so, as a condition of William's will, his grandson, William Henry Stephens Cornish, changed his name to William Henry Stephens Cornish Stephens in order to gain the inheritance (let's call him WS-2 for the sake of clarity). He married Agnes Steven in West Kilbride, Scotland on the 3rd of June 1908 and they produced a son, William (WS-3) in 1910 and one more son and two daughters between 1911 and 1915. William (WS-2) died in 1947, followed by Agnes in 1952.

William (WS-3) had married Aileen Davis in 1941, had produced a son William (WS-4) in 1942 and were living at Kensington Lodge with his parents. He (WS-3) gained the major part of the inheritance upon his mother's death and, when Kensington Lodge was procured by Surrey County Council in 1958, everyone moved to Oxted. They took with them the cannon that had stood on the front lawn: William (WS-1) had brought it back from South America as a reminder of his involvement with the Paraguayan War in which he had managed to become involved.

However, that did not end the connection of the Stephens family with Oatlands. When William (WS-3) died in 1978, his son William (WS-4) inherited. He now lives overseas but still, as far as we can tell, owns the freeholds to several properties in Oatlands - their 'resident ownership' being in the form of a very, very long leasehold. He married Pauline Sheriden in Jamaica in 1995 but, as far as we are aware, has no children to inherit the 'empire' that was begun by his great-great-grandfather (or was it really Caroline???).

View Caroline's family tree (opens in new window - Adobe PDF Viewer required)

View William's family tree (opens in new window - Adobe PDF Viewer required)

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William and Caroline are buried together in the churchyard of St Mary, Walton on Thames.- "A massive tomb of domus type. Built of grey brick and 3" thick slabs of white marble, stands behind a holly hedge alongside Church Walk". Sadly, this tomb has been 'vandalised' in recent years and is now reduced to the inner brick base-layer. Neither the church authorities nor Elmbridge Borough Council admit to any knowledge of this but, as that volume of marble would weigh several tons, it seems improbable, if not impossible, that they would be unaware of its removal - it is far beyond the capacity of any 'sneak-thief' in view of its weight and location.

A bronze memorial plaque to Caroline is situated in the north aisle of St Mary's Church, Oatlands.

Thomas Roberts Cornish and Elizabeth Ann Cornish (nee Stephens) are also buried in the churchyard at St Mary, Walton on Thames..

Meadowleigh - Aucote - Finnart House

Meadowleigh-1883Meadowleigh

The house was originally known as Meadowleigh and is clearly shown on the 1883 Ordnance Survey map as being a substantial property with obviously ladscaped grounds.If this is where the modern day "Meadows Leigh" gets its name then somebody within the council should get their knuckles rapped...

It hasn't proved possible to positively identify the property in the 1861 census, but according to "The Elmbridge Hundred" the house was built by Major Albert Vaillant (after whom Vaillant Road is named) in about 1860. He is certainly there in the 1871 census, with his wife, two sons and four servants (cook, parlourmaid, housemaid and a nurse for the boys).

Major Vaillant died in November 1878 and the house is likely to have been sold after probate was granted in 1879.

Aucote

By the time of the 1881 census, the house had very clearly changed hands, and changed its name - it was now named "Aucote" and was owned by Francis Burdet Money Coutts, and he was there with his wife Edith , two daughters (Clara and Eleanor), one son (Hugh) and nine servants,

F B Money-CouttsF B Money Coutts (as he is usually referred to) was to become the 5th Baron Latymer (hence the modern Latymer Close) in1913 when he was granted the title (which had been "in abeyance" since 1577 - i.e.336 years) by King George V.

He was born as Francis Burdett Thomas Money and the "Coutts" was aquired in 1881 when his mother (the daughter of Thomas Coutts - of the banking empire) and he addopted the name as part of a challenge against his aunt Angela, who had violated the terms of the will that had made her the sole heir to the Coutts fortune. A settlement was reached, and Angela received two-fifths of the income until her death in 1906, at which time Francis became the sole beneficiary.

It is unclear when he moved from Oatlands - Aucote is uninhabited in the 1891 census, so it must have been some time between 1885 and 1891 but there is, so far, no real clue to enable us to narrow down the date.

The Times of Thursday, Nov 24, 1904; printed the following on page 1:

"I, FRANCIS BURDETT THOMAS MONEY COUTTS, of Whites Club St. James-street, London, Esquire do hereby give notice that I have ASSUMED, and intend upon all occasions and at all times to sign and use and be called and known by the NAME of FRANCIS COUTTS.... dated this 23rd day of November 1904".

He was a significant character in the history of the Village, and his most visible contribution to the village of Oatlands was his dontation of the land for the Working Men's Club in St Mary's Road, ehich was founded in 1885 and of which, we believe, he was the first President. Noted as a poet and author (using the pen-mane of "Mountjoy,") he wrote and published at least 23 works between 1896 and his death on the 8th of June 1923.

Finnart House

We haven't yet fully trascribed the 1901 census but we do know that the property, now renamed "Finnart House", appears in the 1911 census with John Lyle and his family in residence - there were two sons, three daughters and twelve servants. He was listed as a widower, his wife Margaret having died at the Grand Hotel in Northumberland Avenue, London on the 12th of February 1907. John Lyle'e occupation is stated as "Sugar Refiner" - he was in the family of Lyles that was famous for its "Lyle's Golden Syrup" before becoming Tate & Lyle in 1921.

John Lyle's great legacy was to Weybridge, rather than to Oatlands, for he donated the land for Weybridge Recreation Ground to Weybridge Council on the understanding that the council would have a duty "to preserve it in perpetuity as an open space, for the benefit of the public, and to allow no buildings of any kind to be erected thereon". In 1949, the council decided that part of the land would be better used as a car park and the neccessary access road.

John Lyle died on the 5th of July 1914, leaving "effects to the value pf £452,035 10s 3d.

We are currently unsure what heppened to Finnart House next. John Lyle doesn't seem to appear in the telephone directories there after 1911 and we are unsure who purchased the property after his death - it doesn't seem to have remained as a residence for any of the children - but we do know it became a school in 1937.

In 1901, the Hayes Certified Industrial School for Jewish Boys, had opened as a specifically Jewish institution for the education and training of abandoned or problematic boys. .The school was originall certified by the Secretary of State to receive 60 boys, and by 1918 the school held 128 boys, following the construction of an extension..
From 1920 onwards, although the school enjoyed considerable educational successl, the number of pupils began to decrease. This decline was due to the fact that fewer Jewish boys were committed to the school by the courts, which was in part a consequence of legislative changes brought about by the Criminal Justice Act (1925) and the Children and Young Persons Act (1933).


Prince Frederick Augustus - Duke of York (16 August 1763 – 5 January 1827)

Duke of YorkText







Further Reading

Oatlands House - WWLHS

Oatlands House by J W Lindus Forge
Walton & Weybridge Local History Society (1972)


 

 George III: A Persoal HistoryGeorge III: A Personal History by Christopher Hibbert
Basic Books (2000)



The Noble Duke of YorkThe Noble Duke of York: The Military Life of Frederick Duke of York and Albany
by Alfred H. Burne
Kessinger Publishing (2010)


A Memoir of the Duke of York & AlbanyA Biographical Memoir of His Late Royal Highness Frederick, Duke of York and Albany
by John Watkins (1827)
Various Reprints

EvidenceA circumstantial report of the evidence and proceedings upon the charges preferred against His Royal Highness the Duke of York in the capacity of commander in chief, in the months of February and March, 1809
by Frederick Augustus, Duke of York and Albany
Original publisher inknown


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