Thursday 30 August 2012

Chapel House, Blackfen

I and a friend from the LGMG caught the bus from North Greenwich to visit Red House, William Morris's Arthurian fantasy-home in Bexleyheath. On the way we spotted this extraordinary little folly, weirdly marooned next to a roundabout on Blackfen Road. My photograph of it was pretty hopeless, so here's one lifted from Google Earth:
Why, we pondered, take what seemed to be an ordinary small house and fit it with toy Gothic details to make it look like a chapel?

The great Bible of British folly-hunting, by Headley & Meulenkamp, doesn't help us in this instance as the house doesn't get a mention. However Professor Google comes to our rescue. It was once in the grounds of Danson House and was constructed in the 1760s as an eyecatcher or, according to some sources, was an even older building that was adapted for the purpose. An old postcard showing the house was popped onto Flickr some time ago, and here is what one viewer commented, rather movingly:

My grandfather puchased this house sometime in the 1920s and I lived there as a boy during the 1960s - The Powers that Be destroyed the vista of the house when they decided to force us to sell the front garden where the yew tree and well was in order that the new widened road has a "nice wide grass verge" onto the newly built roundabout. The well had a tomb stone (covering it) upon which was engraved lurid threats of what would happen to anyone who drank the water from the well. Notwithstanding the threats of death, there was a pump in the house that took water from the well. The tombstone is still there having been dismantled and re-erected in front of the chapel's battlements - the tombstone's writing (and scull and crossed scythes) is no longer visible. After the roadworks my father decided enough was enough and sold the house and land to the timber merchants next door who used the land and neglected the house. Very very sad and completely incomprehensible as to why the planners took the front garden - I remember crying when they chopped the tree down - my father kept the trunk which may still be there in the side building.
            My father used to tell me of the times when the steam traction engines would stop outside to fill their water tanks.  
            The house is older than one might think - Wooden beams set into the inner facing battlement wall in the loft indicate that it was already an old cottage when it was converted to a folly chapel in the 1760-70s.

In this map from the original series of the Ordnance Survey in the 1880s you can see Chapel House and the accompanying well marked:


An unexpected addition to the day!

9 comments:

  1. I went past this chapel / house today, thank you for putting this here so people could find it. Sad story though it is.

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  2. Great thanks for the info I have been evr wondering as I passed it.

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  3. You're welcome. It's funny how many people seem to look this post up - there can't be much information available about the Chapel.

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  4. I've lived in the area all my life and passed this so many times and never really understood what it might have been -- great post ��

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  5. I have a Spiritual friend who tried to rent this building three years ago with the notion of doing it up and turning it into a roadside healing chapel. A very negative response was what he got, nobody seems to give a damn about this cute little building, so I suppose like thousands of others across the UK derelict and falling down, this will be the fate of this one. Such a shame.

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  6. I am the boy who cried when they chopped the ancient yew tree down all those years ago - Just before the fellers started their task I hugged the trunk and cut my left forearm on a hidden protruding old metal bracket - I bear the scar to this day - a reminder of government vandalism.

    When the brickie was reassembling the tomb (I did not think his brickwork was up to much) in its current position, I placed an old penny coin in the cement base under the tomb covering stone slab as a time capsule. Before the old well was filled in and covered up, archaeologists excavated the bottom of the well to see if there was anything useful but nothing much was found

    The oldest house for miles around but the planners of the time couldn't care less - what they did was terrible.

    Just before my grandfather passed away he wrote a small book about the property which he had privately published in 1955. Amazon occasionally has copies but you can see what the property looked like when he first purchased it by going to the following amazon site page:-

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/HISTORY-CHAPEL-HOUSE-DANSINGTON/dp/B01DPS5A08


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  7. Just a followup from me "the boy" - the amazon link clearly illustrates the magnificent yew tree - so sad

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  8. Thank you so much for your comment, which I've only just spotted. I might well buy the book if I can find a copy, just to honour you and your family, and the chapel.

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  9. I was told on a tour of Danson House that it was built by Danson's owners to mark the boundary of their property. That's why it's so small - to give the illusion when viewed from the top of Danson House that it was further away (and that the lands were more extensive).

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