It was then converted to a house and was occupied by several of Frenchay’s prominent families. When the house and nine acres of land was sold in 1936 it fetched £3,300 at auction.
The Newlands was named after Newlands, a large house which was demolished to build the present road. In 1768 the house was described as Frenchay Inn or Frenchay Coffee House.
It was then converted to a house and was occupied by several of Frenchay’s prominent families. When the house and nine acres of land was sold in 1936 it fetched £3,300 at auction.
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Pearces Hill was originally called Mill Lane. It was renamed after William Pearce and his son Henry who owned Frenchay Mill from 1851-1871. They lived in the manager’s house on the right hand side of the mill.
This house, which was demolished as part of a flood prevention scheme, was one of the tea gardens popular in Frenchay between the two World Wars. Originally it had a crenellated roofline. Photographs of the mill and tea gardens can be seen in Frenchay Village Museum. Cliff Court Drive is built in the grounds of a house called Cliff Court. It was previously called Cabin Cliff. In 1779 it was occupied by Mrs Gwynn and her two daughters Henrietta and Helena. Her husband, who died in 1772, was a privateer commander and is buried in the Unitarian churchyard.
It had a number of owners and tenants and was finally owned by C.H.B. Elliott who wrote the definitive history of Frenchay. He sold it and it was demolished. Due to a clerical error over boundaries the house was excluded from the list of listed buildings in Frenchay, which might have prevented the demolition. Wadham Drive is named after John Wadham, Lord of the Manor of Frenchay.
John Wadham bought a house in Frenchay in 1818 and named it Manor House. He was then able to call himself Lord of the Manor. He was involved in glass manufacture. He made crown and green window plate and was also involved in the Phoenix Flint Glass House near Temple Gate. He left the house a few years later to return to Bristol so that his son Thomas could live in it. Thomas died in 1849 and is buried in Frenchay. William Tanner was a solicitor to Hannah Rooke, who lived in Frenchay Park (now a Frenchay hospital administrative headquarters). On her death in 1864 there was much surprise and speculation when it was found that her whole estate was inherited by William Tanner. He lived there until his death in 1887 when his son inherited the property.
William Tanner was remembered as a ‘sharp operator’. One story concerns his attempts to block up a footpath running through his estate. It is said that the night before the hearing to decide on the legality of this he entertained the objectors so lavishly that they were too drunk to give evidence the next day. Many roads in Frenchay are named after prominent former residents.
The Harford family were bankers and ironfounders. Edward Harford married Sarah, daughter of John Scandrett of Yorkshire. Their only son, John Scandrett Harford, owned the Blaise estate. He married Mary, and on John’s death she moved to Malmains. She lived there until her death in 1830. Her fourth son, Charles Gray Harford, purchased the property from his brothers and lived there until his death in 1856. He is buried at Frenchay. Elliott Avenue is named after Charles Hugh Babington Elliott, author of 'Winterbourne, Gloucestershire', who was born at Winkfield Vicarage, Windsor, on 11 March 1852.
He came to Bristol in 1884 and in 1898 bought Cliff Court, Frenchay. He lived there until it was sold and demolished to build Cliff Court Drive in the 1950s. The family then moved to Bradfords House next door to the former vicarage. His entire career was spent in education as HM Inspector. He retired in 1912 but led a busy life for many years after. His book on the history of Frenchay was published in 1936, and has come to be recognized as the most important and comprehensive history of Winterbourne. It is available to buy at Frenchay Museum. Charles died in 1943 and was buried in Frenchay Parish Graveyard. Charles Elliott and his wife Annie Beatrice had two daughters, Mary – known as Molly – and Nancy. Molly was born on 1 March 1896. Her life was spent in Frenchay and she interested herself in all kinds of local activities. She became the first woman church warden in 1940, a post she held successfully for 22 years. She helped to run the Girls Friendly Society (GFS) and in 1927, Molly and four of her GFS friends toured the Lake District in a motorised caravan named Princess Mary. Her record of the trip and photographs of the caravan are on display in the museum. Molly died in March 1978 and is buried in Frenchay Parish Graveyard. Nancy was born on 23 October 1897. Like her sister, Molly, she joined the Volunteer Aid Detachment during the Great War and worked as a nurse in the Military Hospital at Cleve Hill, Downend. She served on the Parochial Council for many years and was active in the GFS. She died in July 1984 and was buried in the Frenchay Parish Graveyard.
Carol Thorne |
Frenchay Place Names
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