'Hall Place' is a former stately home, today a
Grade 1 listed building and Scheduled Ancient Monument, beside the
River Cray, west of
Bexleyheath and north-east of Old
Bexley. It is in the
London Borough of Bexley in south-east
London.
It is situated just off the A223, Bourne Road, south of
Watling Street (A207) and north of the 'Black Prince' interchange of the
A2 Rochester Way with the A220.
Early history
The house dates back to around 1540 when wealthy merchant
Sir John Champneys (also spelt ''Champneis''),
Lord Mayor of London in 1534, used stone recycled from a nearby former
monastery,
Lesnes Abbey, to build himself a country house on a site where a manor house was recorded some 300 years earlier in 1241.
Alterations to Champneys' house were made in 1560. In 1649, the house was sold to another wealthy
City merchant, Sir
Robert Austen (1587–1666), who added a second wing built of red bricks, doubling the size of the house but without trying to harmonise the two halves built in highly contrasting architectural styles. He was created 1st Baronet Austen, of Hall Place in Bexley, on
10 July 1660 and briefly held the office of Sheriff of
Kent.
Dashwood tenants
The house remained in the Austen family until the mid 18th century when
Robert Austen (1697–1743), the 4th baronet (Sheriff of Kent in 1724 and MP for
New Romney from April 1728 to 1734), died and the estate was eventually purchased (c. 1772) by his brother-in-law Sir
Francis Dashwood, a member of the notorious
Hellfire Club. It remained in the Dashwood family until 1926, but was used as a boarding school for much of the 19th century.
In about 1870, Maitland Dashwood returned to Hall Place, restored the building and leased it to various tenants. These included, in the early 20th century,
Lord Churston and his wife
music hall singer and actress
Denise Orme, and, from 1917, the
Countess of Limerick. A major figure in early
20th century social society, Lady Limerick's social gatherings included the future King
George VI.
Council ownership

A view of Hall Place showing the topiary garden
Although the Municipal Borough of Bexley took ownership of the Hall Place house and grounds in 1935, Lady Limerick remained a tenant until her death in 1943, making alterations and beginning the house’s
topiary garden of traditional
heraldic figures, the
Queen's Beasts — later completed and made open to the public by the Council to mark the coronation of
Queen Elizabeth II.
The house was used as an
American army communications centre in World War II (intercepting German signals for later decoding at
Bletchley Park). Post-war, after again being used as an annex to the local technical school for girls, the building was restored in 1968 to became the headquarters of Bexley’s Libraries and Museums service, until 1995.
Today
The building still houses a museum of local artefacts, and a history and tourist information centre. The estate's Jacobean Barn is now used as a
public house and
restaurant with bars in the Mill House. Set within 63 hectares of parkland and Grade II
★ gardens, the estate is now managed by Bexley Heritage Trust, a non-profit-making
charity established to develop the house and grounds (the Trust is also responsible for
Danson House, west of Bexleyheath).
In the gardens, there is a topiary lawn, herb gardens and herbaceous border. The former walled gardens have a plant nursery with allotments, model gardens and a sub –tropical plant house. Hall Place also has three galleries presenting art exhibitions and museum displays.
The Hall Place Playing fields are home of
Old St Marys FC.
External links
★
Hall Place website
★
Danson House website