Guest blog by local historian Philip Grant
In 1850, Wembley House
was occupied by a doctor, and by the 1870’s John Woolley had made it his home.
He was a stockbroker, and as well as the house he also owned the adjacent 27
acres, which were run for him by a farm manager as a dairy farm, with pigs and
poultry. Either side of Wembley House, in large grounds, were Wembley Orchard
to the west (with its own stables and coach house) and another former farmhouse
to the east. This was renamed “Rhampore” in 1882, when it became the residence
of His Highness Rajah Rampal Singh (one of the founder members of the Indian
National Congress Party, who started “The Hindusthan” newspaper while living
here, before returning to India as ruler of Kalakankar in 1885).
It was probably John Woolley who added several Victorian “gothic” features to Wembley House, including a tower and turret looking out over extensive gardens, with a broad path running through them down to a duck pond.
Wembley House itself was
acquired in 1915 for use as a private school, with both “Boys” and “Ladies”
sections. A Council school for both primary and secondary pupils was built next
door in the 1920’s, and in the late 1930’s Wembley House was acquired by
Middlesex County Council, and demolished, with a view to extending this. As it
was, Wembley Hill School was badly damaged by a V1 flying bomb in 1944, so a
brand new secondary school was built on both sites in the early 1950’s, opening
as Copland School in 1952, on the corner of Wembley High Road and Cecil Avenue.
In 2014 the school became Ark Elvin Academy, which is in the process of erecting new buildings on part of its playing fields. The existing school, on the site of Wembley House, is due to become an informal landscaped area once demolished, but how long before this valuable High Road frontage is rebuilt again for more high-rise homes?
Wembley History
Society recently received an enquiry. A lady from Surrey had a miniature
painting of a Victorian gentleman, noted on the back as being “John Turton
Woolley of Wembley House, Wembley. Great uncle of H Arnold Woolley.” She wanted
to know where “Wembley House” was, as it did not appear to exist now. Luckily,
past research by members of the Society provided the information.
John Turton Woolley of Wembley House, Wembley. |
There was a “Wembley House” mentioned in documents as far back
as 1510, the chief home of the Page family who created a grander mansion at
Wembley Park in the 18th century. The Victorian Wembley House was on
the south side of the Harrow Road, about halfway between the present day Park
Lane and Wembley Hill Road (Wembley Triangle) junctions. In 1817, it was the
home and business premises of a wheelwright, but the mainly agricultural
district of Wembley began to become gentrified after a station (Sudbury and
Wembley, now Wembley Central) was opened on the London and Birmingham Railway
in 1844. Wealthy professional men could now live with their families in country
homes, away from the grime and squalor of central London, but still commute
easily to the City.
It was probably John Woolley who added several Victorian “gothic” features to Wembley House, including a tower and turret looking out over extensive gardens, with a broad path running through them down to a duck pond.
When Woolley left, or died, in the 1890’s, Wembley House passed into
the hands of Colonel George Topham. By the early 20th century
Wembley was starting to be developed for housing, and Topham decided to lay out
most of his farmland as the Wembley House Estate. Some homes in Cecil and
Lonsdale Avenues had been built before the First World War, although most were
built in the 1920’s.
In 2014 the school became Ark Elvin Academy, which is in the process of erecting new buildings on part of its playing fields. The existing school, on the site of Wembley House, is due to become an informal landscaped area once demolished, but how long before this valuable High Road frontage is rebuilt again for more high-rise homes?
Ark Elvin Academy, with new buildings under construction,
from the diverted footpath across its fields, and with Brent House and the High
Road in the background, October 2016.
If John Turton
Woolley were to return, 120 years on, what would he think of the view from the
bottom of his garden? Would he see the desecration of a beautiful country home,
or (with his stockbroker hat on) a potential source of profits for his investor
clients?