Interior of Falconwood in Shooter's Hill
Interior of Falconwood in Shooter's Hill
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Interior of Falconwood in Shooter's Hill
SC_PHL_01_559_55_678 (Collage 145215)
London Metropolitan Archives: LCC Photograph Library
View of the drawing room of Falconwood, a mansion situated on Shooter's Hill. The property, originally called Falconhurst, was built between 1864-67 by the 2nd Lord Truro, Charles Robert Wilde, who was said to be an illegitimate son of George IV. The mansion was built in an Italian style as Lord Truro had spent much of his life in Italy. Later occupants of the house included Hull MP Clarence Smith and then the Baron and Baroness d'Erlanger who used it as a weekend retreat. The house eventually was turned into a 20-room hotel. The house was eventually acquired by Woolwich Borough Council and after the failure of the hotel it was eventually demolished in 1959. The site has since been incorporated into Oxleas Wood. The photographs are taken prior to demolition and the property is empty with some doors are boarded up, although decorative ceiling detail is visible. The photograph is taken from virtually the same spot where 'The Drawing Room, Falconwood' was painted by Sir John Lavery in 1917.
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