Sarum Chase | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Grade II listed |
Type | Mansion |
Architectural style | Neo-Tudor |
Address | 23 West Heath Road, Hampstead |
Town or city | London |
Country | England |
Coordinates | |
Groundbreaking | 4 September 1932 |
Completed | 1932 |
Design and construction | |
Client | Frank O. Salisbury |
Architect | Vyvyan Salisbury |
Sarum Chase is a Grade II listed[1] neo-Tudor mansion,[2] at 23 West Heath Road, Hampstead, London,[3] described by Nicholas Pevsner as "pure Hollywood Tudor".[4] It was built in 1932[5] as the home and studio of portrait artist Frank O. Salisbury[3]. The word Sarum is the old name for the town of Salisbury. The architect was Vyvyan Salisbury, his nephew.[6] The author's wife cut the first sod on the site, on 4 September 1932.[7] They moved in on 4 July 1933.[7]
In his 1953 autobiography, also titled Sarum Chase.[3][7], Salisbury wrote:
Telegraph Hill rises from the junction of Platt’s Lane and West Heath Road to one of the highest points in Hampstead overlooking London, with a wonderful view across country to the Chilterns. It was the place where the beacon was lit to carry the tidings of the Spanish Armada. What a place for a garden! What a situation for a House! The land was as bare as the heath itself except for a group of giant oaks in front, and it was the glory of these trees which ultimately decided the matter. This was the last primeval site on Hampstead Heath, the very summit of London, and I resolved to have a house worthy of the situation […] This wonderful little hill at the very top of London was a wilderness of stinging nettles and wild plants and it was thrilling to look forward to what might be made of it.
On his death in August 1962,[3] Salisbury bequeathed the house in trust to the British Council of Churches. However, the BCC sold the mansion and auctioned its contents.
On 7 June 1968, it was the setting of a photoshoot for The Rolling Stones, for their Beggars Banquet album, by photographer Michael Joseph.[8] Previously unseen images from the shoot were exhibited at the Blink Gallery in London in November and December 2008.[9] The house was also the setting for a low-budget horror/ glamour film, Miss Frankenstein.[10]
When listed, in May 1974,[6] the house was in use as St Vedasts School for Boys.[6], an arm of the School of Economic Science. The SES sold the building in January 2005, for £9,300,000.[11][12] It is now once again a private residence.[1]