Captain Gray's Houses: A History of Sion Row, Twickenham

Author:   Robert Shepherd
Publisher:   Sacristy Press
ISBN:  

9781789590005


Pages:   548
Publication Date:   15 April 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Captain Gray's Houses: A History of Sion Row, Twickenham


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Author:   Robert Shepherd
Publisher:   Sacristy Press
Imprint:   Sacristy Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 4.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   1.165kg
ISBN:  

9781789590005


ISBN 10:   1789590000
Pages:   548
Publication Date:   15 April 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

This large volume details the building and social histories of two streets in Twickenham: Sion Row (dating from 1721) and Montpelier, both by Captain Gray. The first part provides an extraordinarily detailed overview of the buildings’ development. The author explains the whole process of planning, construction, fitting out and costs, which shed great insight into the evolution of building development. There are a few useful illustrations to aid their understanding. Well explained, but with some admitted conjecture, are the alterations made dining succeeding decades to the houses. Some of these changes reflect the social aspirations of the owners or tenants but also how a building’s use has evolved. Changes also arose reflecting the fall and then rise of interest in Georgian buildings, culminating in the final phases of conservation, where the work of SPAB does receive mentions. The author also raises succinctly those dilemmas faced in ‘Listing’ interpretations. The bulk of the book is however very much a social history and dispels many modern preconceived ideas of life from the 17th century onwards. The development of ‘suburbia’, the nature of those areas before development and the occupation of those living there is well detailed. The occupants were primarily from the ‘middling’ sorts (today’s middle class). The author has unearthed many startlingly frank details of their lives. They also seemed to have travelled widely, had relatively few possessions and often lived to a great age. Certainly an unusual book, but for someone interested in old houses or social history, a useful tool. -- Clive Baker * SPAB magazine * Shepherd’s book throws a revealing light on the material culture of the ‘middling orders’ who played a crucial part in the growth of what became outer London. … Engagingly written, well-illustrated and beautifully produced, this is a book to be dipped into, [adding] significantly to our knowledge of the history of outer west London, and it can be strongly recommended to anyone interested in the process of suburbanisation that has slowly transformed the lives of countless Londoners over the past three centuries. -- Geoffrey Tyack * London Topographical Society Newsletter * It has been a pleasure to read what would probably be classified as a work on local history that is substantial, well written and handsomely produced. The author is not a professional historian … but he writes better and more interestingly than many academics. This is a welcome addition to the literature of the Georgian building world, not just for those interested in London’s history but for shedding light on the entrepreneurial and collaborative nature of so much eighteenth-century urban development. -- Charles Hind * The Georgian *


This large volume details the building and social histories of two streets in Twickenham: Sion Row (dating from 1721) and Montpelier, both by Captain Gray. The first part provides an extraordinarily detailed overview of the buildings' development. The author explains the whole process of planning, construction, fitting out and costs, which shed great insight into the evolution of building development. There are a few useful illustrations to aid their understanding. Well explained, but with some admitted conjecture, are the alterations made dining succeeding decades to the houses. Some of these changes reflect the social aspirations of the owners or tenants but also how a building's use has evolved. Changes also arose reflecting the fall and then rise of interest in Georgian buildings, culminating in the final phases of conservation, where the work of SPAB does receive mentions. The author also raises succinctly those dilemmas faced in 'Listing' interpretations. The bulk of the book is however very much a social history and dispels many modern preconceived ideas of life from the 17th century onwards. The development of 'suburbia', the nature of those areas before development and the occupation of those living there is well detailed. The occupants were primarily from the 'middling' sorts (today's middle class). The author has unearthed many startlingly frank details of their lives. They also seemed to have travelled widely, had relatively few possessions and often lived to a great age. Certainly an unusual book, but for someone interested in old houses or social history, a useful tool. -- Clive Baker * SPAB magazine * It has been a pleasure to read what would probably be classified as a work on local history that is substantial, well written and handsomely produced. The author is not a professional historian ... but he writes better and more interestingly than many academics. This is a welcome addition to the literature of the Georgian building world, not just for those interested in London's history but for shedding light on the entrepreneurial and collaborative nature of so much eighteenth-century urban development. -- Charles Hind * The Georgian * Shepherd's book throws a revealing light on the material culture of the 'middling orders' who played a crucial part in the growth of what became outer London. ... Engagingly written, well-illustrated and beautifully produced, this is a book to be dipped into, [adding] significantly to our knowledge of the history of outer west London, and it can be strongly recommended to anyone interested in the process of suburbanisation that has slowly transformed the lives of countless Londoners over the past three centuries. -- Geoffrey Tyack * London Topographical Society Newsletter *


Shepherd's book throws a revealing light on the material culture of the 'middling orders' who played a crucial part in the growth of what became outer London. ... Engagingly written, well-illustrated and beautifully produced, this is a book to be dipped into, [adding] significantly to our knowledge of the history of outer west London, and it can be strongly recommended to anyone interested in the process of suburbanisation that has slowly transformed the lives of countless Londoners over the past three centuries. -- Geoffrey Tyack * London Topographical Society Newsletter *


Author Information

Robert Shepherd read history at Durham and worked in the oil and gas industry. He has had a lifelong interest in architecture, which led to researching the history of Sion Row and Captain Gray's houses. 

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