Selby House is a Grade II-listed house facing Ham Common in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. [1] [2]
A three story brick house with five windows. Originally dating from 1683 but modified in the early 18th century and refaced and a porch added in the 19th century. [1] [2]
Selby House dates from the 17th century when in the 1649 Survey of Ham Manor the land was called Three Elm Square Piece. A farmhouse known as Brimsweech Close stood here in 1695 and was replaced or enlarged in the early 18th century as Selby House. [3]
There is a story that George III’s wife, Charlotte, visited in 1809 but that is more likely to have been Newman House in Ham. [4]
It was the home of the writer and poet Ann Rolfe (1789–1850) from about 1835 to her death in 1850. [5] [6] She operated a seminary for girls and her husband Edward was schoolmaster at the National School. [7]
Frederick Benbow, a perfumer, second son of George Henry Benbow, died here in 1859. [8] [3]
Miss Copeland advertised her services in teaching French, German and drawing about 1870. It was then the home of Charles Edward Withall and his family until the late 1880s. [9]
The Noble family lived in Selby House from 1889 to 1953. [10] Archibald Francis Noble (1886–1916) was a captain in the 10th Cheshire Regiment who was killed in World War I fighting in France. There is a memorial to him in St Andrew's Church, Ham. [11] Elizabeth Mary Noble had married Kenneth Douglas Field (1880–1917) from Latchmere House; he was killed in 1917. [12] They are both commemorated on Ham's War Memorial. Her son-in-law, RAF pilot Arthur David Watson, was killed in 1940 in World War II and is commemorated on Petersham's War Memorial. [13]