Forty Hall

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Forty Hall
Middlesex

Forty Hall from the south
Location
Grid reference: TQ33689853
Location: 51°40’11"N, 0°4’6"W
Village: Forty Hill
History
Built 1620s
Manor house
Information
Owned by: Enfield Council

Forty Hall is a manor house of the 1620s in Forty Hill in the north-east of Middlesex, close to the border of Hertfordshire. The house is a Grade I listed building,[1] is today used as a museum. Within the grounds is the site of the former Tudor Elsyng Palace.

The hall is within a formal park laid out on the top of Forty Hill, a level gravel plateau standing above the flood plain of the River Lea to the east, and the valley of the Turkey Brook to the north and west. The park slopes down into the valley, where are the remains of old ponds. A loop in the former course of the New River forms the boundary of much of the estate, though this has since been re-routed to the east.

To the north are Whitewebbs and Myddelton House. The road to the east was formerly the main route from Enfield to Waltham Cross, but traffic has been re-routed towards to A10.

History

Southern aspect and south-west wing
Eastern aspect
Stable gateway (c.1650)

The house was built between 1629 and 1632. It is generally said to have been built by Sir Nicholas Raynton or Rainton, a wealthy London haberdasher who was Lord Mayor of London from 1632 to 1633.[2] However Tuff, writing in 1858, says that it was built by Sir Hugh Fortee and bought by Raynton, quoting a 1635 survey describing a copyhold house "some time Hugh Fortee's, and late Sir Thomas Gurney's".[3] Lambert also gives Fortee as the origin of the name.[4]

The detailed history of the house has until recently been poorly understood, since it is known to have been built in the 1620s, but has the external appearance of an 18th-century house. A detailed examination carried out for the council as part of the Forty Hall Conservation Plan concluded that the house was probably not designed by a famous architect such as Inigo Jones, but by a "clever artisan builder".

The original square house was not altered much in the 17th century other than a small extension to the north-west in 1636. In 1640 Rainton was imprisoned for refusing to help Charles I raise a loan. He died in 1646 aged 77 and was buried at St Andrew's Church in Enfield.[2] The hall then passed to his great-nephew, also Nicholas. He was able to extend the estate northwards by buying and demolishing the neighbouring Elsyng Palace in 1656. In 1696 the hall passed to John Wolstenholme (probably a descendant of the financier and merchant of the same name and member of the Virginia Company), who carried out major refurbishment possibly following a fire, including construction of an extension to the south-west, and planted the avenue. In 1740 the house passed to Eliab Breton, who remodelled the ground floor. Later owners included Edmund Armstrong (1787) and James Meyer (1799), whose family built the nearby Jesus Church in 1835. In 1894 the hall was bought by Henry Carrington Bowles of the neighbouring Myddelton House for his son Major Henry Ferryman Bowles (1858–1943), Member of Parliament for Enfield and later 1st Baronet Bowles.[5] In 1897 there were further changes including enlargement of the south-west wing. In 1951 the Bowles family sold it to the Municipal Borough of Enfield, and it has since been used as a museum.

The house and estate today

The Hall's permanent exhibition tells the story of the house and its estate throughout the ages and looks at the life and times of Sir Nicholas Rainton and life in the seventeenth century through a range of visual and audio interpretation and displays. There is also a range of guided tours, led by a Jacobean character. The exhibition programme focuses on art, ecology and heritage.

Grounds

The lake
Cedar of Lebanon at Forty Hall

The estate of around 264 acres makes up part of the Metropolitan Green Belt. Around the house are formal gardens, a small lake and a magnificent Cedar of Lebanon. The remainder includes a park that is open to the public and a farm. An avenue of trees runs down the hill from the house into the valley of the Turkey Brook, also known locally as Maidens Brook. The northern and much of the southern boundary are marked by the former course of the New River.

In popular culture

Outside links

Template:Common

References

  1. National Heritage List 1294469: Forty Hall (Grade I listing)
  2. 2.0 2.1 Pam, David (1977). The New Enfield: Stories of Enfield Edmonton and Southgate. London Borough of Enfield. 
  3. Tuff, J (1858). Historical, topographical and statistical notices of Enfield. J.H.Meyers. https://archive.org/details/historicaltopogr00tuff. Retrieved 27 December 2011. 
  4. Lambert, B (1806). The history and survey of London and its environs. IV. London: T.Hughes & M.Jones. 
  5. "The Bowles of Myddelton House Story". http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~bowlesfamily/The%20Bowles%20of%20Myddelton%20House.htm. 
  6. "Forty Hall 1, Antiques Roadshow, Series 43". bbc.co.uk. 3 January 2021. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000r0bw. 
  7. "Forty Hall 2, Antiques Roadshow, Series 43". bbc.co.uk. 14 March 2021. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000t982. 
  • Gillam, Geoffrey (1997). Forty Hall, Enfield, 1629–1997: house, courtyards, walled kitchen garden, pleasure grounds, park & home farm. Enfield: Enfield Archaeological Society. ISBN 0950187720.