Haslemere Educational Museum has an online archive of local photographs that you can access via a computer in their main gallery. This has states that "Godfrey Blount's New Crusade Chapel in Weydown Road - now demolished. The Weaving Cottage is behind". It looks like at the time of the photograph the building was being used as a house, with a house name being displayed on the left hand side of the door and maybe a letterbox on the right side of the door. Although taken at a very similar angle to the older Little St Cross photograph, the slight difference in angle enables us to see what is referred to as 'The Weaving Cottage' right behind the building.
Little St Cross / Godfrey Blount's New Crusade Chapel, Weydown Road, Haslemere Reproduced courtesy of Haslemere Educational Museum |
Little St Cross, Weydown Road, Haslemere Reproduced courtesy of The Dartford Warbler |
I think it is fair to conclude that these buildings were demolished when the newer houses were built in the front gardens of Wildwood and St Cross on Weydown Road, the houses occupied by Greville MacDonald and Godfrey and Ethel Blount in the early 1900s.
Plan of Weydown Road, Haslemere with St Cross & Wildwood |
St Cross Cottage, Weydown Road, Haslemere reproduced courtesy of Haslemere Educational Museum |
The Haslemere Educational Museum's archive notes that the above is "St Cross Cottage, the Weaving Cottage in Weydown Road - now demolished ". This building, which I was not previously aware of, explains how the weaving industry was run from St Cross when the Blounts were living there. The industry was being run from a cottage in the grounds, whilst the Blounts lived in St Cross, the main house. I wonder if this building is the 'studio' that Therese La Chard lived in briefly and where she made some observations of the Haslemere Peasant Arts movement. I had thought that she had stayed in Little St Cross, but St Cross Cottage appears more likely to be used as a home than Little St Cross.
I am not sure whether the photograph below of St Cross spinners and weavers is taken from the front right hand side of St Cross Cottage, or not.
All in all, whilst it is not a surprise to see that these buildings have been described as demolished, it is sad to read that they are definitely no longer standing. Another piece of Haslemere's history lost to garden grabbing.
Group of spinners and weavers at St Cross, Haslemere, The Studio, XLIII, 1908 (from Haslam, Arts and Crafts Carpets, David Black, London, 1991) |
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