30th May 2024 • The HERALD • Page 31 v SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BUSINESSES v ABOUT US Our roofers are the best in the business and are ready to give your roof a full and completely FREE inspection Waterside Carpet Cleaning PROFESSIONAL CARPET CLEANING! Using Prochem Equipment and Materials • SPOT/STAIN TREATMENT • Fully Insured 023 8066 0878 or 07770 337917 www.watersidecarpetcleaning.com HANDY HANDS HANDYMAN SERVICES Your Local Handyman For ALL Your Small Jobs • Gutter Clearance & Clearing • PVCu Fascias, Gutters, Soffits & Conservatory Cleaning • Pressure Cleaning of Paths & Patios • Window Cleaning • Interior & Exterior Painting • Grass Cutting, Strimming • Hedge Trimming • Shed Re-treated/ Roofs Re-felted • Flat Pack Assembly Fully Insured Free Estimates Work Guaranteed References on Request T: 023 8084 0096 M: 07840 860202 Stanswood House was eventually demolished when it had deteriorated beyond repair, in the late 1950’s early 1960’s. If anyone has any knowledge of a person who received treatment in this hospital, please can they send me that person’s name and any other information they might have pertaining to their stay in the hospital either Tales from the Graveyard of All Saints’ Church, Fawley as a patient or staff role. Thank you. My thanks to Annabella Drummond, Mandy Smith and the Waterside Heritage Centre for their contribution to this article. Continued from page 30 Over the last 250 years, many famous gures have lived at, or been associated with, Eaglehurst, including the Earl of Cavan, Guglielmo Marconi and Count Batthyany (whom we met in a previous story). Indeed, in the 1840s, Queen Victoria considered buying the property, but opted instead for Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. Eaglehurst’s most visible feature is Luttrell’s Tower, designed by omas Sandby and built around 1780 for Temple Simon Luttrell, then owner of the Eaglehurst estate. At that point – apparently – subterranean passages led from the tower down to the beach, and to an array of marquees in the Eaglehurst grounds. e house at Eaglehurst was built around 1808 for the Earl of Cavan – who found the accommodation in Luttrell’s Tower too con ned, and damp. Looking back to April 1779, in the Hampshire Chronicle we nd an interesting advertisement for the services of a racehorse, Petruchio, stabled at Eaglehurst and presumably owned by Luttrell: “TO COVER, THIS SEASON, at Eaglehurst, near Fawley, by the New Forest; for two guineas each mare, and half a crown the Groom. The noted fine brown horse, Petruchio, 15 hands and one half high, full of bone, late Jennison Shaftoe’s. Esq., deceased. He was got by Snap, his dam by Old Cade, and she out of a daughter of Old Slammerkin, and got by a full brother of Old Babraham; Slammerkin was the dam of Black-and-all-Black, and Fenwick’s Duchess. Petruchio, when four years old, won the great sweepstakes at York, beating Blue-Cap and Sulphur, and five more, with great ease; and in April following, he won the 140 guineas sweepstakes at Newmarket, heath subscription, beating Hermione and five other subscribers; and in the same meeting he won the 140 guineas subscription, against six more subscribers, and after that became a trial horse. The last time he started, he beat Gimcrack, Chalfont, and several more. N.B. Proper care will be taken of the mares”. In May the following year, the advert reappeared. Although by then the price for Petruchio’s services had dropped to one guinea per mare, the groom was still 2s. 6d. Petruchio’s original owner, Jenison Sha o, born in Northumberland, was an MP, race-horse owner and breeder, and notorious gambler. He shot himself in 1771, allegedly because of gambling debts. A er his death, his brother Robert continued to run his Cambridgeshire stables. How Petruchio wound up at Eaglehurst, we may never know. At the very end of 1780, a great collection of furniture and other e ects from Eaglehurst, along with Petruchio, were put up for sale; we’ll look at that in the next story. PETRUCHIO OF EAGLEHURST by Robin Somes, Fawley and Blackfield Memories beating Snipe and Javelin, and three more, though Snipe beat Chatsworth twice in that year, and in May following, Petruchio won the AscotEngraving of Luttrell’s Tower, 1807, from a drawing by I. Nixon
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