rank-math
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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/teachbytes/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114This tree lined alley in Parson’s Green is quite annoying as hardly anything seems to be known about it.<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n The alley may be a legacy of ancient paths though, as it shows up as part of a rough road in John Rocque’s map of London from 1746, when all around here were still fields.<\/p>\n A large swathe of land to the south of the alley was leased around the same time by the two Chauncy sisters, daughters of Richard Chauncy, a director of the East India Company, who owed his own early wealth to inheriting Edgcote House in Northamptonshire. Once they had the land, the sisters built a large Georgian manor house, Broom House<\/a>, at the southern end of the property, close to the River Thames.<\/p>\n In 1805 Sir Evan Nepean gained possession of the estate, and in 1823 it was sold to Laurence Sulivan. His daughter, Charlotte Sulivan<\/a> inherited the property in 1866 and lived in the house until she died in 1911.<\/span> After 1911, Broom House was bought by the Hulingham Club and demolished to expand its grounds.<\/span><\/p>\n All this was taking place at the far south of the estate, while Bells Alley was at the northern end, far from the genteel Georgian ladies.<\/span><\/p>\n It’s possible, but unproven, that the road that was to become Bells Alley, running along the edge of the estate may have been shrunk to an alley to keep road traffic away.<\/span><\/p>\n