Identification and description | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | MORDEN HALL PARK | ||||||
Location |
|
||||||
Localisation | Latitude: 51.399193 Longitude: -0.18683295 National Grid Reference: TQ 26230 68244 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
||||||
label.localisation | [51.4065265206445,-0.188592030964276], [51.4064529340507,-0.188432621852655], [51.4064639994044,-0.188411968644916], [51.4063843151202,-0.188247294152342], [51.4063047153502,-0.188088684533124], [51.4061753472606,-0.187818799780876], [51.4059572625898,-0.187372495753475], [51.4058019245668,-0.187059170494717], [51.4054957981068,-0.186480872196172], [51.4052597624137,-0.186019101755592], [51.4049937443845,-0.185499889707149], [51.4048100319618,-0.185151295918321], [51.4046274698137,-0.184794593408566], [51.4044636886563,-0.184507902642513], [51.4043008921519,-0.184202972744198], [51.4041291677199,-0.183898786925587], [51.4037126704051,-0.183184910504625], [51.4034450101087,-0.182750825068521], [51.40322312266,-0.182387607200923], [51.4030894119904,-0.182164439005321], [51.4028888185449,-0.181869119746828], [51.4026257430134,-0.181459021345036], [51.4024285863748,-0.18114133033115], [51.4023780781893,-0.181064490369073], [51.4020114692165,-0.181153838546537], [51.4018984880405,-0.181170771164235], [51.4013034349054,-0.181194348709369], [51.4008666310274,-0.181211374721807], [51.4002961436387,-0.181219758146416], [51.4004168034246,-0.181805412469394], [51.4002930017499,-0.181895228927612], [51.4004002947108,-0.18222112932242], [51.4005748587455,-0.182081384003857], [51.4006845914576,-0.182682328054646], [51.40091254039,-0.182607793012648], [51.400838412864,-0.183426616403127], [51.4004038694102,-0.183825613949258], [51.4003483969894,-0.183755023425131], [51.4002536301442,-0.183597043013028], [51.4002086400052,-0.183508857993144], [51.4001950501312,-0.183529609609858], [51.4001583695482,-0.183529050128226], [51.4000761414935,-0.183609134917103], [51.4000283335729,-0.183625175181651], [51.3999213179067,-0.183655694479232], [51.3996800754625,-0.183756223788829], [51.3993810469205,-0.183899725320752], [51.399148764439,-0.184018471063187], [51.3990414785281,-0.184082625004177], [51.3988852941036,-0.184206190246533], [51.3987792756671,-0.184311523332117], [51.3987089924552,-0.18441735292893], [51.3986760365975,-0.184466242088994], [51.3986317955296,-0.184559280641632], [51.3985908978924,-0.184684129878468], [51.398579600709,-0.184717641614145], [51.3985754171865,-0.184774405014834], [51.3985818162219,-0.184835119747906], [51.3986039839748,-0.184985548211462], [51.3986703798873,-0.18527201921265], [51.3988119894408,-0.185918032671963], [51.3989314086254,-0.186367516862337], [51.3990216674209,-0.186642941756181], [51.3990976694094,-0.186896677433102], [51.3991200604969,-0.187027418989824], [51.3991643938523,-0.187001830558368], [51.3992523466135,-0.186905670341202], [51.3992871622461,-0.186856608149902], [51.3994040987454,-0.186678550522927], [51.3994650383787,-0.18655746544306], [51.3995306255879,-0.186367722553517], [51.3996109694054,-0.186209353664905], [51.3996533188625,-0.186164247890249], [51.39977297514,-0.18610095989843], [51.3998438717323,-0.186061380701205], [51.3998768574924,-0.186052139989442], [51.3998933813991,-0.18626332067461], [51.3999059897906,-0.1863290246691], [51.3999431838605,-0.186377870423487], [51.3999790296971,-0.186377372658689], [51.4000933072047,-0.186381981315435], [51.4001815554028,-0.186364789957313], [51.4002468263995,-0.186339392755368], [51.4003063995385,-0.18631422092428], [51.4004644495418,-0.186011267643596], [51.4007360619058,-0.186390039403763], [51.4004875902844,-0.187030088778516], [51.4004701260025,-0.187077129018408], [51.4004821376278,-0.187105450145147], [51.4003642719758,-0.187385677755261], [51.400413977542,-0.187546942748209], [51.4004156708169,-0.187656424235244], [51.4004150794641,-0.187802512188062], [51.4004273466738,-0.187901454784271], [51.4004456933847,-0.188120818684645], [51.4004480914021,-0.188275917612987], [51.4004404526131,-0.188335565384666], [51.400391524207,-0.188482758113301], [51.4006293969018,-0.188808562239353], [51.4007500498856,-0.188958041931456], [51.4008285255787,-0.18905968975626], [51.4014381917584,-0.189870682468156], [51.4014551619371,-0.189886473860729], [51.4015173435697,-0.189914857071094], [51.4015563201242,-0.189940059102535], [51.4015875857385,-0.189965565598003], [51.4016505382271,-0.190043274159655], [51.4017944901626,-0.190202120086948], [51.4019896382211,-0.190385514777914], [51.4024751503634,-0.190714075021662], [51.4029377608356,-0.191016645918413], [51.4033587922586,-0.191292065366822], [51.4035315806833,-0.191402481712135], [51.4036518343495,-0.191442983421866], [51.4036957290169,-0.191453587662751], [51.4038975709581,-0.191445625005389], [51.4041851712068,-0.191493917340772], [51.404211064884,-0.191505246237996], [51.4042630600125,-0.191540203115017], [51.4045673448281,-0.191585796583973], [51.405079237302,-0.191664321675068], [51.4054905659883,-0.19172831077296], [51.4057213791648,-0.191764453840887], [51.4059394675505,-0.191809323465076], [51.4062038306567,-0.191852368260106], [51.4065740251159,-0.19191798279073], [51.4070915968675,-0.192031244692983], [51.4072542063307,-0.192065982501893], [51.4077491374872,-0.192128722160065], [51.4077606355424,-0.192004338379842], [51.407790150918,-0.191697295169879], [51.4078205899658,-0.191449570683284], [51.4078504101941,-0.191305699275012], [51.4074696346362,-0.190510415588671], [51.4071229128519,-0.189807390082208], [51.4069821391131,-0.189524243506451], [51.4067614353713,-0.189059910370041], [51.4065265206445,-0.188592030964276] | ||||||
Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001336 Date first listed: 23-Aug-1995 |
A moated garden of the late C18, set within a park created in the late C19.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Until the Dissolution, the ground now occupied by Morden Hall Park was owned by the
Abbey of Westminster. In 1553 the land was purchased by Messrs Duckett and Whitchurch,
and in the following year the estate was brought by Richard Garth, the son of a successful
lawyer and himself a clerk of the Petty Bay at Chancery. At this date the estate contained
a 'newly built mansion house' known as Growtes which stood to the south of the present
Hall, close to the present Morden Lodge (Fretwell 1994). The property was to remain
in the Garth family until the late C19. Between 1750 and 1765, the fifth Richard Garth
is said to have built the present Hall (ibid). Between 1782 and 1873 a number tenants
occupied the Hall, the last being Rev J and Mr T White, who used the premises as 'a
school for young gentlemen' (ibid). Meanwhile the kitchen garden was let separately
to a succession of nurserymen.
From 1867 Gilliat Hatfeild, the son of wealthy business man and a partner in the firm
which ran the Morden snuff mill, began to buy up parts of the Garths' Morden estate
and negotiated to buy the Hall. Hatfeild had been brought up on the estate at Morden
Cottage, next to the snuff mills. After finally purchasing the Hall in 1873, he went
on to create a park from land surrounding the Hall, removing field boundaries and
demolishing cottages. The east and west boundaries were planted up with narrow fringes
of trees, while trees from the former boundaries were retained as park trees and small
clumps and single trees were planted across the open parkland to supplement them,
giving a park of mainly chestnuts and willows. The main feature of the new park was
a tree-lined drive from the Hall to the new South Lodge in Morden Road. Few changes
were made to the existing watercourses but several new bridges were erected to carry
the drive and paths across them. Hatfeild also made minor alterations to the Hall
gardens, and built a new stable block and new lodges. The c 40ha park was described
in 1892 as being fenced with oak paling and stocked with about 100 fallow deer (ibid).
Gilliat Hatfeild died in 1906 and his son Gilliat Edward (G E) Hatfeild inherited
and returned from Virginia to run the estate. During the First World War Hatfeild
loaned the Hall to the London Hospital as a convalescent home for military patients.
He himself moved into Morden Cottage. After the war the Hall was used as a convalescent
home for women and children, funded by Hatfeild and run by the Salvation Army. The
garden, especially the kitchen garden, continued to be maintained to a high standard.
His only major alteration to the park landscape was to lay out a rose garden around
Morden Cottage. When G E Hatfeild died in 1942 he left Morden Hall and the park to
the National Trust in order to preserve it intact but it was not until c 1980 that
the Trust took over the direct management of the estate. In the meantime the Hall
was leased to the local authority and cattle replaced the deer, grazing continuing
until 1972.
In 1991-2 the kitchen garden was converted from a nursery to a garden centre with
a tea room and car park. The management of the park changed to reflect its 'green
lung' status and importance for education. Today (1999) the site continues under the
ownership and management structure developed since 1980.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Morden Hall Park is located in urban
south-west London and lies c 500m south of Merton, c 300m east of Morden, c 4km north
of Sutton, and c 1.5km east of Mitcham. The boundaries of the roughly triangular site
are formed to the north-east by the Croydon and Wimbledon Railway, constructed 1865,
to the west by Morden Hall Road (A297), and to the south by Morden Road (A239). The
c 38ha level site is crossed by a number of watercourses, all part of the River Wandle
which runs north to the Thames.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The main entrance into the park today (1999) is from the
walled garden which now serves as a car park and has a number of commercial enterprises
within its walls. The access is from Morden Hall Road, c 30m to the north of Morden
Lodge. The main drive to the Hall, as made by Gilliat Hatfeild in 1873, still survives
however as a footpath from South Lodge on Morden Road (OS 1895). Laid out as a tree-lined
avenue, it takes a curving line across the centre of the park before turning west
and continuing its approach to the Hall as a c 300m long formal avenue, crossing first
the eastern branch of the River Wandle, then the eastern arm of the moat via two late
C19 bridges (listed grade II).
There are three additional gateways in Morden Hall Road. The northernmost accompanies
the Gate Lodge, a mirror image of South Lodge, 100m north-west of the Hall. This entrance
was made by Hatfeild in 1873 as part of his improvements. The middle gate (with the
wall to the north listed grade II) breaks the brick wall of the western boundary.
This was the main entrance to the Hall before the formation of the park by Hatfeild
and opened directly onto the turning circle which lay below the south front. The road
from the gateway located c 120m further to the south on Morden Hall Road runs for
c 150m between the leat parallel with the southern arm of the moat and the north wall
of the kitchen garden, past the C19 stable block to the north and Morden Cottage to
the south-east, before joining the drive to the east of the Hall.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Morden Hall (listed grade II) stands within a moated enclosure
at the centre of the north/south axis of the estate, towards the western edge of the
site adjacent to Morden Hall Road. The moat was created with water from the River
Wandle and apparently dates from the mid C18 (Rocque 1746). Now (1999) used as a licensed
restaurant, the two-storey villa was built between 1750 and 1765 by the fifth Richard
Garth. Since 1780 the bow on the north front has been replaced with a plain porch
and doorway and the south entrance has also been altered. The Hall was stuccoed in
the mid C19 (Fretwell 1994). When G E Hatfeild died in 1942 the Hall, along with Morden
Cottage and the kitchen garden, was let to Merton and Morden Urban Council. The Hall
was extensively renovated in the 1990s.
Some 150m to the south-east of the Hall is Morden Cottage, a small separate house
used in the late C20 as the borough Registry Office. Said to have been built in the
C18 as a hunting lodge (ibid), it was the home of Gilliat Hatfeild before he purchased
Morden Hall in 1873, and subsequently the home of his son. Its garden, which spans
the River Wandle, is laid out as an irregular rose garden and remains largely unchanged
since G E Hatfeild had it made in the 1920s.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The c 2ha pleasure grounds are situated to the north,
east, and south of the Hall and are contained within an C18 water-filled moat. The
entrance to the Hall from Morden Hall Road turns south and leads to a court south
of the Hall. This entrance was down-graded by Gilliat Hatfeild when he made the Gate
Lodge entrance. The court, enclosed by railings, has a central fountain structure
which probably, before 1950, stood further south, in the centre of the circular pool
in the turning circle (ibid). The grounds within the moat are laid largely to grass
with isolated trees including three large oriental planes which overhang the northern
moat. The only surviving way across the moat is to the east of the Hall. There an
ornate iron bridge (listed grade II), guarded on the Hall side by a gate and matching
iron railings, provides access from the formal avenue. Hatfeild removed all the boundaries
of the gardens to leave simple lawns sloping down to the moat. The lawns were punctuated
with a few large trees and the existing fountain and formal walk were retained. The
OS 1st edition map of 1866 shows a path leading south from the fountain or statue
at the centre of the turning circle on the south front, across the south garden, then
laid out as an orchard, dividing to cross the southern arm of the moat via two bridges.
PARK The c 35ha park lies to the north, east, and south of the pleasure grounds. The
drive from Morden Road curves north across the park for c 400m before turning west
towards the Hall. The southern part of the avenue which lines it is of roughly alternating
lime and horse chestnut with a few ash and sycamore; the section to the north-west
is of common lime. The large chestnuts are possibly survivors from the earlier field
boundaries which Hatfeild removed when he created the park. The character of the park
has changed from being a neat park set in countryside to, by the late C20, a rougher,
more verdant area hemmed in by buildings. To the north-east and north the railway
line is partly screened by the narrow boundary belt of mainly horse chestnut and common
lime, with occasional hornbeam, London plane, tree of heaven, false acacia, and sycamore.
Individual park trees and small clumps are scattered across the parkland and include
a wide range of species.
The area to the south-west of the avenue is dominated by the River Wandle which enters
the park at its most southerly point and immediately divides. The main branch, that
to the east, continues for c 200m before dividing around an island known in 1840 as
the Wilderness (Tithe map, 1840). After 100m it narrows and continues north. The western
branch follows the south-west boundary of the park for c 150m before turning sharply
north-east around the boundary of Morden Lodge (listed grade II). Morden Lodge (outside
the area here registered), a brick Regency house, stands in its own grounds at the
south-west corner of the park, near the site of an earlier house known as the Growets.
The Lodge, which had become separated from the estate, was reunited in 1929 when G
E Hatfeild purchased it but by 1999 it had returned to private ownership. The two
branches of the river join up to the north of the island. The ground between the two
branches of the river is (late C20) planted up as woodland or has been taken over
by scrub which provides screening from the roads to the south. Now (1999) known as
The Wilderness, the area was, in 1750, fields and osier beds with several small islands
and was known as Stielhams and Mount Nod (Survey plan, 1750). In the early C19 part
of the area was included in Morden Lodge Garden with walks connected by bridges, but
later the area was leased out with the kitchen garden. After 1873 a connecting channel
between Mount Nod and Stielhams was filled in and the area connected to the park by
bridges, creating a circular walk ornamented with a statue of Neptune. A rectangular
water body was filled in in the 1960s and at the same time the bridges were removed.
The area is fairly inaccessible and is managed (1999) as a wildlife sanctuary.
The river continues north for c 50m before dividing once more; the western branch
enters the kitchen garden at this point. The main branch continues north through the
grounds of Morden Cottage, where it was formerly used to power two snuff mills, and
after c 75m passes under the iron bridge that carries the avenue towards the Hall.
Some 50m to the north of the avenue the river divides again, the two leats running
parallel in a north-easterly direction across the northern parkland before exiting
the site under the railway line. The parkland to the north of the these pieces of
water is open with only an occasional tree to break up the views towards the industrial
buildings and residential developments of Merton. Hatfeild drained the marshy ground
and planted it in keeping with the main body of the park. In 1926-7, spoil from the
Northern Line extension (to Morden) was dumped onto this area with further tipping
occurring during the period 1952 to 1955. Two additional water courses were filled
in c 1950.
KITCHEN GARDEN The kitchen garden is situated c 150m to the south of the Hall, enclosed
within high brick walls with stone capping (listed grade II). The c 1ha rectangular
garden is orientated north/south. A channel of the River Wandle runs through the centre
and a cast-iron clairvoie is set in the south wall. Hard car parking (first introduced
in 1962) takes up much of the western half, with a garden centre to the east and a
tea room in the north-west corner against the wall (both introduced 1991/2). An entrance
between the tea room and the garden centre leads north onto the drive which leads
from Morden Hall Road to Morden Cottage and the stables.
The kitchen garden was probably built at the same time as the Hall (late C18). For
most of the C19 it was a tenanted market garden with four glasshouses and a central
conservatory. Under G E Hatfeild the kitchen garden was managed as part of the estate,
with fourteen gardeners employed in the 1920s producing food for the hospital, and
a small surplus sold.
Brick buildings to the north of the kitchen garden which are now (1999) used as craft
workshops and an information centre were originally potting sheds which were later
converted to stables and cowsheds
REFERENCES
E Walford, Greater London: a narrative of its history, its people and its places (c
late C19) E M Jowell, The History of Merton and Morden (1951) K Fretwell, Report on
Morden Hall for National Trust (1994)
Maps J Rocque, Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster and Borough of Southwark
and the country near ten miles around, surveyed 1741-5, published 1746 A survey of
part of the River Wandle, 1750 (in Fretwell 1994) Tithe map for Morden parish, 1837
(in Fretwell 1994) Tithe map for Merton parish, 1844 (in Fretwell 1994) Tithe map
for Mitcham parish, 1847 (in Fretwell 1994)
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1883 OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition published
1866 2nd edition published 1895
Description written: July 1999 Amended: September 1999 Register Inspector: LCH Edited:
November 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.