Court Cottage

From Lacey Green History

Revision as of 16:04, 1 February 2023 by Joan (talk | contribs)

.Research by Laurence Rostron

Court Cottage is in Church Lane. Lacey Green. See Church Lane, Lacey Green.

In the 1823 Enclosure Act Joseph Floyd was allotted a piece of land measuring 18 poles. This piece of land was described as the garden of Joshua Dell who had given it up. The map clearly shows this as the site of Court Cottage. There is no sign of a cottage on this site at this stage.

In 1853 it appears that Dan Floyd, shoe maker of Lacey Green, purchased the Court Cottage site, now measuring 8 poles, from Joseph Floyd and Charles Brown. There is mention of a pond that is not included in the sale and a small extra piece of land that may well have been owned by Charles Brown. There is no mention of a property at this stage.

In 1857 Dan Floyd appears to have taken out a mortgage but the reasons are unclear. However the document is clear that at this time there was a cottage on the site. It appears clear from this that Dan Floyd built a cottage on the site sometime between 1853 and 1857.

In 1864 Dan Floyd sold Court Cottage to Henry Robert Butcher.

In 1884 Henry Robert Butcher and a Daniel Clarke Esq.(assumed to be a financier) sold Court Cottage to Thomas Cheshire, farmer of Loosley Row.

In 1885 Thomas Cheshire provided Court Cottage as a marriage settlement for his new wife Mrs Sarah Ada Tilley. This document states clearly for the first time that Court Cottage was "erected by Daniel Floyd". For more about Thomas Cheshire see John & Ann Cheshire

In 1888 Thomas Cheshire died.

In 1889 the new Mrs Sarah Ada Cheshire sold Court Cottage to Mr. Peter Tyler Floyd, shoemaker of Lacey Green. See Peter and Ann Floyd

In 1924 Mr Peter Tyler Floyd died and bequeathed Court Cottage to his son Joseph George Floyd, grocer and coal merchant of Loosley Row.

In 1935 Joseph George Floyd died and bequeathed Court Cottage to his wife Annie Floyd. See George & Annie Floyd

In 1951 Court Cottage was sold to Albert George Gomme who lived there with his wife Ethel Adelaide Gomme and his son Geoffrey Arthur Gomme.

In 1973 Albert Gomme died but his wife and son continued to live there.

In 1991 Geoffrey Arthur Gomme sold Court Cottage. See Geoff Gomme

In 2011 Geoff Gomme sent Joan West a letter, in response to her request for his life at Court Cottage in Church Lane, Lacey Green. The following is an extract in which he describes the house.

The Gomme family moved into Court Cottage in 1938 – 39.

It consisted downstairs of :- the living room, about 12ft by 12ft, with a cooking range (open fire on the left, oven on the right). A small kitchen (or scullery), which was called “the backplace”. This room with a sloping roof was added on the back by a previous tenant. In it was the “copper”, a large copper bowl, bricked in with a fireplace below, where water was heated for laundry, bathing, etc.

Upstairs a similar layout, one large bedroom and a smaller room which was more like a landing leaving little privacy for the occupier as people passed through to reach the main bedroom.

There was no electricity in the cottage at the time.   Light in the living room consisted of a “Wonder” lamp.   Fuelled by paraffin with a two-inch wick it gave a lovely white light – better than our modern bulbs.   Elsewhere candles had to be used – including going to the loo down the garden.

We had no tap water then.  Outside the back door was a water tank, catching rain from the roof.   Any water we used had to be drawn up from the tank using a bucket attached to a rope.   It wasn’t until the late fifties that electricity and water were piped in.

The walls were mainly brick and flint.   In some places they were eighteen inches thick, with no cavities and no draught proofing.   And was it cold!   All we had for heating was the range on which most of the cooking was done.   The range had an open fire on the left with the oven on the right.   When we sat in front of the fire we scorched at the front and froze at the back as the draught was pulled in from the door and the windows.

Throughout WW2 we had evacuees living with the family.

We got on well with all our evacuees.   The biggest problem was bath night.   If you can imagine drawing up bucket after bucket from the tank, heating it in the copper, carrying it through to the tin bath placed in front of the fire.   It was quite a chore.   Then a wooden clothes – horse would have to be erected with a sheet as a partition and all those not involved would have to retreat to the colder parts of the cottage.      But somehow we managed!

My father, Albert Gomme, who was a farm carter, and my mother Ethel, had rented their cottage until 1952.   Somehow they managed to raise five hundred pounds to buy it – paid in three instalments.   It must have taken some time for money wasn’t easy to come by in those days.

I’m not sure if it helped that during the war we took in evacuees.   I believe a small payment was paid to help with the cost.

My parents finally paid for the cottage on April 26th 1952.

In the late 1950’s electricity and water was piped in.

P.S. I sold it in 1991 to move to a small flat in Naphill.

Addendum

The cottage was built on the edge of what I long suspected - and was confirmed for me by Dennis Claydon, our local historian, had been a village green. Years ago there were seven buildings built round the side opposite to the Main Road, none on the Main Road - from Court Cottage round to the Crown Public House - now long gone. They were all brick and flint built, except a bungalow owned by organist and piano teacher, Miss Nancy Hawes.

I should have mentioned that when we took in evacuees there were already four of us squeezed into the cottage. You can imagine what it was like with six of us all vying for space and the facilities - such as they were. What the evacuees circumstances were like where they came from I don't know but I don't recall any complaints.

That's all I can think of at the moment, Joan. Pic. enclosed of what the cottage may have looked like when we moved in.

1991  Conveyance Geoff Gomme Sold Court Cottage.

2016 Ordinance Survey Map Church Lane, Lacey Green, researched by Laurence Rostron. Court Cottage occupied by Mr L Prentice.



C 1900  TOM HICKMAN &  ?.     Tom was a good rick builder. Son Arthur was a chimney sweep, moved to Turnip End.