Free HYLAND Magazine Issues

Edition 18: The Details

CLICK ON ANY OF THESE IMAGES FOR A FREE STREAMING SUBSCRIPTION OF HYLAND, a digital lifestyle magazine featuring residential decoration, design, architecture, art, travel, fashion, cuisine, good works and reflections.

Issue link: http://digital.hylandmagazine.com/i/262951

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 113 of 345

HYLAND Christopher Hatton Turnor, designer of the Watts Gallery, Surrey and the Stoneham War Shrine, Hampshire, trained initially as an architect under Edwin Lutyens and Robert Weir Schultz. Lutyens described Turnor, not without admiration, as "odd and mad"; Turnor's architectural career was brief, for he is known mainly as an agricultural reformer, having inherited vast tracts of land. C r e s w e l l 's g r a n d p a r e n t s d i d n o t commission the house; rather, they discovered it, in 1908, half-finished, in a most fortuitous way, after they took a wrong turn on the road while motoring to visit cousins nearby. Thus began a happy tenure which has lasted generations. Creswell's grandparents, particularly his grandmother, Isabel Vulliamy (1869- 1956), entrain a fascinating pedigree and character. Vulliamy's father, of Huguenot descent, fled France in the 1880s. Isabel met and married Col. Edmund Creswell, a widower with no fewer than eight children, and together they came to live at Copse Hill, which Turnor had originally designed for a Miss Head and her female companion. As the doyenne of Copse Hill, Isabel Vulliamy Creswell did surprising things. Thus began a happy tenure which has lasted generations.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Free HYLAND Magazine Issues - Edition 18: The Details