Identification and description | |||||||||
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Name | KING EDWARD VII HOSPITAL | ||||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 51.016376 Longitude: -0.74678772 National Grid Reference: SU 88004 24858 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001454 Date first listed: 17-Feb-2000 |
The grounds of an early C20 tuberculosis sanatorium. The formal gardens were laid
out by the hospital architect, Percy Adams, with extensive planting plans by Gertrude
Jekyll, c 1903(8.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Upon the accession of King Edward VII in 1901, his financial adviser, Sir Ernest Cassell,
put £200,000 at the King's disposal for charitable or utilitarian purposes. The King,
having been greatly impressed by the tuberculosis sanatorium at Falkenstein in Germany,
decided to found a similar sanatorium for the poorer middle classes in England. He
formed a committee of leading medical practitioners to examine ways of executing his
ideas. A competition was held to obtain design ideas, and Percy Adams (who had not
entered the competition) was appointed architect. A hillside site at Lord's Common,
north of Midhurst, was selected, and after some protracted negotiation with the owner,
Lord Egmont's estate, it was bought for the sanatorium.
In November 1903 the King laid the foundation stone, and the building was opened by
him in June 1906. The construction work was carried out by Longleys of Crawley. The
sanatorium was laid out with extensive ornamental gardens, and was set in pine woodland
on a well-drained, south-facing hillside, c 200m above sea level. Current medical
theories for tuberculosis patients advocated 'Open Air' treatment in clear, unpolluted
air. A carefully regulated regime aimed at treating early stage consumptive patients
was prescribed, composed of measured quantities of rest and varied exercise combined
with a good diet. The exercise element was to consist largely of gardening and walking
in the grounds (Large 1986).
The structure of the formal gardens around the new building, having been laid out
by Percy Adams, was clothed with plants by Gertrude Jekyll (1843-1932), who produced
a series of about forty planting plans c 1905(8 (CL 1909; NMR). A series of letters
from her to Mr Atkinson, Longleys' Clerk of Works (dated November 1905 to March 1906,
private collection) details her instructions for planting. A network of 'measured
walks' was also laid out through the surrounding undulating pine woods for patients
to take further, regulated exercise. By 1908 seventy-five percent of patients were
given some form of work in the garden (Large 1986), and in 1912 a four-hole golf course
(later extended to nine holes) was laid out on former woodland. Other outdoor recreation
was encouraged, including croquet, clock golf and garden games.
The Hospital continued as a tuberculosis sanatorium until 1964, when, with the large-scale
demise of tuberculosis, it expanded its work to treat other thoracic diseases, and
became known as the King Edward VII Hospital. Various additional buildings were constructed
close to the main hospital building during the C20, some covering part of the gardens,
but leaving the majority of them intact. The site remains (2000) in use as a hospital,
although parts of the grounds have been sold into divided ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING The King Edward VII Hospital lies c
4km north of Midhurst, situated on Lord's Common, which was formerly a sandy heath.
The isolated c 17ha site is bounded by a green lane to the south, and on the other
sides by woodland and heath. The ground slopes generally down from north to south,
with to the west a dry valley, in which lies the remains of a small, dammed pond (outside
the area here registered). The setting is rural, with panoramic views from the Hospital
and gardens to the south and south-west, across the broad Rother valley towards the
distant South Downs.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The main approach leaves the A286 Haslemere to Midhurst road
2km east of the Hospital, running west along a lane to enter the site 250m north-east
of the Hospital at the two-storey lodge (c 1905; formerly known as the Engineer's
Lodge, Large 1986). From the lodge the drive extends south-west, sunk between banks
planted with rhododendrons and other shrubs, to arrive at the rectangular forecourt
on the north front of the Hospital. The central main entrance gives direct access
to the northern, administration block. The drive extends west from the forecourt to
give access to the chapel, the former laundry and boiler houses, and staff accommodation
(this last outside the area here registered) standing north-west of the Hospital,
together with a late C20 car park at the west end of the Hospital (occupying the former
site of part of the garden). The drive was laid out when the Hospital was built, and
Miss Jekyll provided planting plans (NMR) for both the drive and the forecourt perimeter.
North of the forecourt two flights of stone steps flanking a stone-walled bank give
access to a broad, informal lawn flanked by trees and shrubs. Although not laid out
with the initial works, this lawn, flanked by shrubs, subsequently replaced an area
of pine woodland. It marked the south end of two of the major measured walks which
extended north and north-west into the woodland (aerial photograph 1938, in Large
1986; Map of Grounds).
PRINCIPAL BUILDING The King Edward VII Hospital (P Adams 1903-6, listed grade II)
stands towards the centre of the site, set into the Lord's Common hillside which slopes
away to the west and south. The long, brick building, in free Tudor style, consists
of two main elements standing parallel to each other: the administration block to
the north and the patients' ward block to the south. These blocks were initially connected
only by a central corridor, linking the main entrance to the north with the garden
entrance to the south, and separated by a narrow neck of formal gardens. Through the
century however further buildings have been erected on the site of most of the neck
of formal gardens, these buildings now (2000) providing further connections between
the two main blocks. The south block consists of a central south-facing wing, flanked
by two further wings angled to the south-west and south-east.
Some 20m north-west of the Hospital stands the south-facing chapel (P Adams 1903-6,
listed grade II), also in free Tudor style, built with two naves in 'V' form to segregate
male and female patients. Loggias on the south-facing sides of the naves lead out
onto a raised lawn edged by a stone wall with steps down to the drive. This is the
remnant of a formal scheme which Miss Jekyll designed to link the Hospital and chapel
(NMR).
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens lie adjacent to the south front of the Hospital
and are overlooked by the wards in the south block. They are laid out in formal terraces
leading down to an informal lawn and playing field beyond, the whole enclosed by woodland.
Panoramic views extend from the upper levels to the south and south-west towards the
South Downs.
The recessed garden door in the centre of the south block leads from the main cross
corridor, which links the north and south blocks, down stone steps to a gravel terrace
extending west and east along the central wing of the south block. Two stone alcoves
with seats flank either side of the doorway, with a further pair of alcoves in similar
style placed close to the outer edges of the central wing. From the doorway an axial
path leads south, flanked by two panels of lawn set on a terrace, planted with a formal
pattern of flower beds (the beds late C20). Steps at the south end of the path lead
down to a second terrace across which the path leads, also flanked by lawns on which
stand two large magnolias (early C20, part of the Jekyll scheme). Further stone steps
carry the path down to a third terrace, below which lies an informal lawn. From the
lawn a further flight of steps, aligned with the garden door, gives access via a grass
bank to the playing field below to the south.
The central flight of terraces is flanked by further terraces, connected by stone
steps and overlooked by the three-storey, angled, flanking ward wings. The terraces
are all supported by drystone walls and are laid largely to lawn with perimeter gravel
paths and borders planted with herbaceous and shrubby material. The lowest storey
of each of the flanking wings contains an open arcade accessible from the garden,
above which balconies extending along the length of each further storey overlook the
gardens.
Between the north and south blocks of the Hospital lie two enclosed courts flanking
the central connecting corridor. These are laid to lawn with large magnolia specimen
shrubs dating from the early C20 planting. The courts are the remnants of the strip
of formal gardens which lay between the north and south blocks (OS 1912; CL 1909).
The former Medical Superintendent's house stands 50m east of the Hospital (outside
the area here registered), set in its own grounds to the east of the playing field,
from which it is separated by a strip of pines and other trees. The two-storey building
(c 1903(6) stands on a terrace (wall rebuilt late C20) overlooking informal lawns
to the south which are flanked by woodland. It was formerly reached via a drive south
from the lodge, which has been subsumed (late C20) within the main hospital car park
lying east of the main drive (OS 1912). Miss Jekyll provided a garden layout for this
area (NMR).
South of the gardens lies the playing field, formerly the site of a small golf course
(begun in 1912, Large 1986), enclosed to the west, south and east by woodland. A wooden
shelter stands at the northern edge. This area was opened up from pine woodland after
the initial works (OS 1912). In the wooded grounds surrounding the Hospital lie the
remains of the 'Measured Walks', created specifically for patients' exercise as part
of the therapeutic regime. These paths, some with the remains of stone edging, ranged
in length from half a mile to three miles, and the majority of them lie outside the
area here registered.
When the sanatorium was constructed, 1903-6, the surrounding pines were left as being
'wholesome and fragrant, as well as of sheltering comfort' (CL 1909), although many
have since been lost. 'Hundreds of tons of pure yellow sand came out of the excavations
for the basement ... which was deposited in such levels and terraces as would best
dispose of its bulk and also form well-proportioned spaces in relation to the building
for the lawn and other garden levels on the southern side' (ibid). Gertrude Jekyll's
around forty garden plans (NMR) detail the planting for the formal gardens on the
south front and the axial sequence separating the north and south blocks. They also
cover the area linking the Hospital and the chapel, the Medical Superintendent's garden
and other areas. Because the soil was light and of poor quality, Miss Jekyll used
many Mediterranean plants, and 'in the case of the Sanatorium walls, the planting
was carefully considered for colour effect ( masses of plants of related or harmonious
colouring being kept near together' (CL 1909). Much of the planting work, and possibly
the 1200 feet of drystone walling, seems to have been done by the pupils of the Glynde
College for Lady Gardeners (Ottewill 1989). Both the college and Miss Jekyll also
provided many of the plants. The maintenance was continued by the patients as part
of their therapy.
REFERENCES
Country Life, 26 (20 November 1909), pp 701-5 S E Large, King Edward VII Hospital
Midhurst 1901-1986 The King's Sanatorium (1986) D Ottewill, The Edwardian Garden (1989),
pp 128-9, n 106 J Brown, Eminent Gardeners (1990), pp 37-9, pls 1, 2, 27
Maps King Edward VII Sanatorium Map of Grounds showing Measured Walks (nd), (King
Edward VII Hospital)
OS 6" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published 1898 OS 25" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published
1912
Archival items Copies of Jekyll's planting plans (file 111, folder 74) are held on
microfilm at the National Monuments Record (originals held at Reef Point, USA). Collection
of letters from Gertrude Jekyll to Mr Atkinson, Clerk of the Works for Longleys of
Crawley, November 1905 ( March 1906 (private collection)
Description written: January 2000 Register Inspector: SR Edited: March 2001
This garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by Historic England for its special historic interest.