54°27′29″N 1°39′36″W / 54.458°N 1.660°W / 54.458; -1.660

Middleton Lodge

Middleton Lodge is a Georgian Palladian mansion set within 200 acres (0.81 km2) of open countryside, on the outskirts of the village of Middleton Tyas, a mile or so off the A1 near Scotch Corner and a 15-minute drive from Darlington, County Durham.

Middleton Lodge was designed by the architect John Carr, and was built between 1777-1780 for George Hartley Esquire.[1]

The Hartley family was one of the major land owning families in the area. George's father, Leonard Hartley, lived in East Hall, one of the larger houses in Middleton Tyas. The Hartleys continued to live in Middleton Lodge until the late 1870s.[2] In 1890 The Hon. Mrs Margaret Dundas, widow of the Hon. John Charles Dundas, MP (1808-1866), is recorded as living there. She died in 1907.[3] It was later the family home of coal owner Sir Arthur Pease, 1st Baronet, who died there in 1927.

Middleton Lodge is still a family home to the Allison family who have lived there since 1980, however it is now also available for exclusive hire for private wedding receptions and functions.[4] It was the filming location for the television film Perfect Day[5] and the Hindu-language children's film Hari Puttar: A Comedy of Terrors.[6]

The Hartley family

Leonard William Hartley

George Hartley (1726-1780) built Middleton Lodge in about 1777. He was born in 1726 in Middleton Tyas. His father was Leonard Hartley (1689-1774) who was a wealthy landowner and copper mine magnate. His mother was Catherine Bowles who unfortunately died at a young age when George was only three years old. He was brought up by his father at East Hall which is nearby. He went to Cambridge University and became a barrister.

In 1774 at the age of 48 George married a widow Mrs Ann Bunting, daughter of the Reverend William Tomlinson who was 34 years old. She already had two daughters, Elizabeth and Dorothy Bunting by her first marriage. Their son Leonard William Hartley was born in 1775. George died in 1780 when his son was only five years old and his property was held in Trust until Leonard came of age.[7]

Leonard went to Cambridge University in 1793. At this time the University commissioned the notable artist Sylvester Harding to paint some of the students and Leonard was one of those chosen. The watercolour is shown.[8]

Leonard died in 1815 and Middleton Lodge was passed to his second cousin Francis Hartley (1778-1820) who died five years later. It was then inherited by George Hartley (1780-1841) Francis’s younger brother. George also went to Cambridge University and became a barrister. He joined the North York Corps of Yeomanry Cavalry and was promoted to Major.[9] George did not marry and the 1841 Census shows him living alone with nine servants. When he died in 1841 his property was inherited by his nephew Leonard Lawrie Campbell who changed his name to Hartley in honour of his uncle.[10]

Leonard Lawrie Hartley (1816-1883) was the son of Archibald Campbell of Bedale Yorkshire who was a medical doctor. Leonard inherited his uncle’s fortune at the age of only 25 and was able to become a wealthy landed proprietor at a very early age. He lived for some time at Middleton Lodge but from about 1852 he rented it to Edmund Backhouse and his family for many years. After he died in 1883 the property was inherited by Elizabeth Martha Eyre who was a distant relative. She lived in West Hall in Middleton Tyas and continued to rent out Middleton Hall.

The Eyre family

Middleton Lodge in about 1900 at the time it was owned by the Eyre family

The Eyre family did not live at Middleton Lodge but they appear to have owned it from 1883 until about 1947. Elizabeth Martha Eyre who inherited the property in 1883 was born Elizabeth Martha Allgood (1821-1892). Her father was Robert Lancelot Allgood of Nunwick Hall.[11] In 1840 she married Henry Eyre (1805-1889) who became a General in the British Army.

When her relative Leonard Lawrie Hartley died in 1883 Elizabeth inherited his Middleton Tyas Estate including Middleton Lodge. She died in 1892 and her son Colonel Henry Robert Eyre inherited the house.[12] When he died in 1904 it was inherited by his eldest son Lieutenant Colin Douglas Eyre of the Kings Royal Rifles. He was tragically killed in 1910 at the age of 30 when he was riding in the Cavalry Brigade Point to Point races and his horse fell.[13] He had been married only 6 months before this accident and had no children so his property went to his younger brother Ralph Vincent Eyre. When Ralph died in 1940 he was unmarried and his estate was left to his cousin Isabella Mary Baker[14] who married Michael Adrian Speir. The Speirs lived in Middleton Tyas for many years but they appear to have sold Middleton Lodge and other properties in about 1946. It was bought by the Ropner family. John Raymond Ropner purchased the property in about 1946[15] and lived there with his family until 1980. It was then bought by the Allison family who still own it today.

The Tenants of Middleton Lodge

Edmund Backhouse (1824-1906)
Juliet Mary Backhouse née Fox, wife of Edmund Backhouse

The Backhouse family rented the house from about 1852[16] until about 1883. Edmund Backhouse (1824-1906) was born in 1824 in Darlington in Durham. His father was Jonathan Backhouse, a leading banker in the family Banking firm of Backhouse and Co. which was later to become part of Barclays Bank. Edmund joined the family banking business and eventually became the Managing Director.[17] He was also the Member of Parliament from 1868 until 1881.

In 1848 he married Juliet Mary Fox who was the daughter of Charles Fox[18] who established the famous garden called Trebah at Falmouth, Cornwall. Charles Fox died in 1883 and Juliet inherited Trebah. The Backhouse family then moved to their Cornwall home and continued Charles’ work in planting the garden. They are both credited with extensive development of the grounds at Trebah, introducing rare trees and conifers, tree ferns, and hybrid rhododendrons over the next 29 years.[19]

Sir Arthur Pease
Lady Laura Pease, wife of Sir Arthur Pease

After the Backhouses left the house was rented by the Hon. Margaret Matilda Dundas (1826-1907). She was the widow of Hon. John Charles Dundas (1808-1866) of Wood Hall[20] who had been a Member of Parliament. She liked to entertain and held frequent house parties and tennis tournaments.[21]

After Mrs Dundas died in 1907 Middleton Lodge was rented by the Pease family until about 1936. Sir Arthur Francis Pease (1866-1927) was born in 1866 in Darlington. His father was Arthur Pease of Cliff House, Marske who was a Member of Parliament[22] and also an owner of a large colliery firm.

Arthur went to Cambridge University and gained a MA degree in 1893. He joined the family coal and ironstone business called Pease and Partners Ltd and eventually became the Chairman and Managing Director.

In 1889 he married Laura Matilda Ethelwyn Allix, daughter of Charles Peter Allix, of Swaffham Prior House. The couple had four children. During World War 1, Arthur was appointed as Second Civil Lord of the Admiralty and he received his baronetcy in 1920. He was an alderman of the Durham County Council and Deputy Lord Lieutenant of the County.[23]

He died in 1927 and his wife Lady Laura Pease continued to live at Middleton Lodge until her death in 1936. The house was then tenanted by the Baird family.

Major Sir James Hozier Gardiner Baird (1883-1966) 9th Baronet of Saughton who rented the house from about 1927 until 1946 was born in 1883. He was the son of Sir William James Gardiner Baird. He became Major in the 4th Battalion of Bedfordshire Regiment. He married in 1921 but unfortunately his wife died in the following year.[24] He remarried in 1923 Joan Violet Barker and several years later the couple came to live at Middleton Lodge. After he left in 1946 it was bought by the Ropner family (see above).

References

  1. "Genuki: In 1822, the following places were in the Parish of Middleton Tyas:, Yorkshire (North Riding)".
  2. http://www.visitoruk.com/historydetail.php?id=17111&f=richmond%5B%5D
  3. "Genuki: Transcript of the entry for the Post Office, professions and trades for MIDDLETON TYAS in Bulmer's Directory of 1890., Yorkshire (North Riding)".
  4. "BQ-magazine - Interviews". Archived from the original on 27 June 2008. Retrieved 19 February 2009. BQ Magazine
  5. King, Peta (1 March 2008). "Playing mansions". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  6. "Hari Puttar's home tales". The Times of India. Times News Network. 28 September 2008. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  7. Hornshaw, Thomas 1972 “Copper mining in Richmondshire in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries” Thesis. Online reference
  8. University of Cambridge. Online reference
  9. The London Gazette, 1831. Online reference
  10. The Gentleman’s Magazine, 1842. Online reference
  11. Biographical Register of Christ’s College, Online reference
  12. The Peerage website. Online reference
  13. Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Saturday 16 April 1910, p. 10.
  14. Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - Monday 15 July 1940, p. 6.
  15. Hartlepool Northern Daily Mail - Monday 08 September 1947, p. 4.
  16. Morning Chronicle - Thursday 09 December 1852, p. 8 mentions the birth of a daughter at Middleton Lodge.
  17. Mid Sussex Times - Tuesday 12 June 1906, p. 2
  18. The Peerage website. Online reference
  19. Historic England website “Trebah”. Online reference
  20. History of Parliament website. Online reference
  21. York Herald - Saturday 15 August 1896, p. 11.
  22. Cambridge University website. Online reference
  23. Leeds Mercury - Thursday 24 November 1927, p. 5.
  24. The Peerage website. Online reference

See also

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