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The manor of Titsey was acquired in 1534
by John Gresham, one-time Lord Mayor of London
and a member of the most prominent merchant dynasty
in Tudor England. His elder brother Richard also
became Lord Mayor of London. Born at Holt in Norfolk,
like Dick Whittington, the Greshams moved to London
in their early teens to seek their fortunes. They
were very successful. John Gresham became a member
of the Mercers' Company, one of the twelve Great
Livery Companies, at an early age in 1517. He
was prominent in"the trade with the Middle East
(spices and silks) and the Baltic (timber and
skins). He founded the Russia Company, to trade
with that far-off and then little-known country,
an initiative which was to lead later in the century
to the signing of a commercial treaty between
Elizabeth I and Ivan The Terrible. He was Sheriff
of London and was knighted in 1537 and became
Lord Mayor in 1547.
Like all his successful contemporaries he invested
his new wealth in land, benefiting from the fluid
land-market following the confiscation of church
lands, and the dispersal of these and some of
the old Crown estates to pay for Henry VIII's
extravagant wars in France. Sir John bought the
manors of Titsey, Tatsfield, Westerham, Lingfield
and Sanderstead on the Kent-Surrey borders as
well as other properties in Norfolk and Buckinghamshire
leaving his successors a handsome estate the nucleus
of which at Titsey has passed down intact to the
present day. He was also a public benefactor supporting
charities, providing feasts in the City, and founding
and endowing Greshams School, at Holt, his birthplace,
in Norfolk.
Sir John's nephew, Thomas, took on the Gresham
mantle in the City He joined the Mercers Company,
was knighted, and was prominent in overseas trade
and banking. His greatest achievement was the
Royal Exchange which he built in 1566 as the chief
focus for the commerce of the City, on the model
of Flemish and Italian examples. He continued
his uncle's connexion with the Crown and worked
as an agent in the Netherlands, gathering information
and smuggling gold as well as trading and banking.
He became a Chancellor to Elizabeth I, and gained
the reputation that with him nothing was impossible.
When the Queen came to stay with him at his new
house at Osterley in Middlesex she criticised
the courtyard for being too small, so in the middle
of the night Gresham got some workmen in to knock
down various walls and in the morning it was twice
its previous size.

Titsey Place. Watercolour by John Doyle (1997) |
Sir John's eldest son William inherited his father's property in and around Titsey and devoted his time to improving the estate and building a new house there. No illustration of the latter exists, as it was largely demolished in the eighteenth century, apart from one small wing at the back which was kept as servants' quarters for the present house at Titsey. |

To view the Gresham Family Tree in full detail,
click on the image above. |
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The seventeenth century Greshams sat in Parliament as MPs and supported the King in the Civil War, suffering accordingly. In 1643 the house at Titsey was commandeered by the Parliamentarians but was later returned. At the Restoration in 1660 Charles II created Marmaduke Gresham a baronet as a reward for the family's support of the royalist cause.
The early-eighteenth century saw a dramatic decline
in the family fortunes. Sir Marmaduke's grandson,
also Marmaduke, was an extravagant spendthrift
who let the house fall into ruin and left large
debts when he died in 1742. The eldest son, Charles,
drowned at sea in 1750 so it was left to his younger
brother John to restore the family fortunes after
he came of age. He married an heiress, Henrietta
Maria, daughter of Sir Kenrick Clayton, and also
inherited a second fortune from his mother's brother
Edward Hoskins. They both left paintings and furniture
which are now at Titsey, and provided him with
the money to rescue the estate. The old house
was considered too dilapidated so Sir John demolished
the greater part, keeping only a small fragment
and built a new smaller red brick house on the
old site. Five windows wide with a neat pedimented
front door, it was a typical symmetrical Georgian
box and remains the nucleus of the present house.
Sir John left an only daughter, Katherine Maria,
the last of the Greshams. Thanks to her father's
prudence she found herself an heiress and in 1804,
after the death of both her parents, she married
William Leveson Gower, a younger son of Admiral
the Hon.John Leveson Gower and first cousin of the Marquess of Stafford, later the 1st Duke of
Sutherland.
In the early-nineteenth century the Leveson Gowers
were at the heart of the Whig aristocracy and
the Duke of Sutherland himself was the richest
landowner in Britain; his wife, who was the Countess
of Sutherland in her own right, having brought
him the whole of the North of Scotland, and his
uncle the bachelor Duke of Bridgwater canal fortune.
This was the culmination of a process which in
five generations raised the Leveson Gowers from
Tory Staffordshire baronets to the grandest of
Whig grandees and 'Leviathans of Wealth'; each
generation marrying an heiress richer than the
last, and each generation being raised a step
in the peerage: 1st Lord Gower, 1st Earl Gower,
1st Marquess of Stafford, 1st Duke of Sutherland.
It was a remarkable record even by the standards
of the Georgian aristocracy. In marrying Katherine
Maria Gresham, William Leveson Gower was therefore
reflecting the tradition of his senior relations.
Sadly, their marriage was short, Katherine Maria
died only four years later. They had three children
however, and their eldest son, also William, inherited
the Titsey estate and an income, it is said, of
£10,000 a year. He married Emily Doyle from a
distinguished Irish military family; her grandfather,
Major-General Sir Francis Hastings Doyle, 1st
Bart, was Deputy Lieutenant of the Tower of London.
Her brother, by contrast, was Professor of Poetry
at Oxford and the author of The Private of the
Buffs and other well-known poems.
Their eldest son, Granville Leveson Gower was
squire of Titsey through most of the second half
of the nineteenth century. He built St. James's
Church at Titsey and considerably remodelled the
house and the garden, continuing the work begun
by his grandfather William in the 1820s. He fully
lived up to the adage that nobody is more interested
in genealogy than the second cousin of a duke.
He decorated the house with the heraldry of the
Gresham, Leveson and Gower families and over a
twelve year period compiled the Genealogy of the
Family of Gresham, privately printed in 1883.
(He gave a copy to Queen Victoria as a present
on her Jubilee in 1887). He was an enthusiastic
historian and archaeologist, a fellow of the Society
of Antiquaries who wrote many papers on local
history and excavated two Roman sites on the Titsey
Estate. He was also active in public life, sitting
for many years as MP for Reigate. He married Sophia,
daughter of Lord Leigh of Stoneleigh Abbey. Theirs
was a very happy marriage and they had a large
family of sixteen children. The eldest son Ronald
sadly died of diphtheria in his twenties, so Titsey
was inherited by the second son Granville Charles
who married Evelyn Brassey of the railway construction
family. They had four sons, none of whom married.
Ronald, the second son, was killed in the first
World War while serving with the Coldstream Guards
in France. Alan the youngest was a major in the
Coldstream Guards and a successful breeder and
owner of horses, his most successful horse being
St.George II which was bred by his father, trained
at Titsey and ridden by Alan to victory in the
National Hunt Steeplechase at Cheltanham in 1938.
Richard, the eldest, was a major in the Grenadier
Guards and served both in World Wars and with
his third brother Thomas lived at Titsey, restoring
the house and reviving the gardens after war-time
requisitioning and occupation by Canadian Troops.
Thomas, in particular, was a keen gardener. They
established the Titsey Foundation to preserve
the house and garden and open them to the public,
together with the church and parkland.
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