Chequers Explained

Chequers
Alternate Names:Chequers Court
Status:Complete
Building Type:Official residence (weekend home)
Architectural Style:Elizabethan
Address:Missenden Road
Aylesbury
Buckinghamshire
HP17 0UZ
Location Country:England
Current Tenants:Keir Starmer, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Completion Date:c.
Client:William Hawtrey
Owner:The Chequers Trust
Material:Red brick with stone dressings and roof tiles
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Grade I Listed Building
Designation1 Offname:Chequers
Designation1 Date:21 June 1955
Designation2:National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens
Designation2 Offname:Chequers
Designation2 Date:30 August 1987
Designation2 Number:1000595
Designation2 Free1name:Grade
Designation2 Free1value:I

Chequers is the country house of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. A 16th-century manor house in origin, it is near the village of Ellesborough, halfway between Princes Risborough and Wendover in Buckinghamshire, at the foot of the Chiltern Hills, 40lk=onNaNlk=on north-west of central London. Coombe Hill is NaNmile northeast. Chequers has been the country home of the serving Prime Minister since 1921 after the estate was given to the nation by Arthur Lee, 1st Viscount Lee of Fareham by a Deed of Settlement, given full effect in the Chequers Estate Act 1917. The house is listed Grade I on the National Heritage List for England.

Origin of the name

The name "Chequers" may derive from an early owner of the manor of Ellesborough in the 12th century, Elias Ostiarius (or de Scaccario). The name "Ostiarius" meant an usher of the Court of the Exchequer and scacchiera means a chessboard in Italian. Elias Ostiarius's coat of arms included the chequer board of the Exchequer, so the estate may be named after his arms and position at court. The house passed through generations of the Scaccario family (spelt many different ways) until it passed into the D'Awtrey family, whose name was eventually anglicised to Hawtrey.

Alternatively, the house could have been named after the chequer trees (Sorbus torminalis) that grow in its grounds.[1] There is a reference to this in the book Elizabeth: Apprenticeship by David Starkey, which describes the early life of Elizabeth I.

History

William Hawtrey built the current mansion around 1565, and it may have involved the reconstruction of an earlier building. A reception room in the house bears his name today. Soon after its construction, Hawtrey acted as a custodian at Chequers for Lady Mary Grey, younger sister of Lady Jane Grey and great-granddaughter of King Henry VII.[2] Lady Mary had married without the monarch's consent, and as punishment was banished from court by Queen Elizabeth I and kept confined.[3] Lady Mary remained at Chequers for two years. The room where she slept from 1565 to 1567 remains in its original condition.

Through descent in the female line and marriages, the house passed through several families: the Wooleys, the Crokes and the Thurbanes. In 1715, the then owner of the house married John Russell, a grandson of Oliver Cromwell. The house is known for this connection to the Cromwells, and still contains a large collection of Cromwell memorabilia.

In the 19th century, the Russells (by now the Greenhill-Russell family) employed Henry Rhodes to make alterations to the house in the Gothic style. The Tudor panelling and windows were ripped out, and battlements with pinnacles installed. Toward the end of the 19th century, the house passed through marriage to the Astley family. Between 1892 and 1901, Bertram Astley restored the house to its Elizabethan origins, with advice from Reginald Blomfield. The restoration and design work was completed by John Birch, architect.[4]

20th century

In 1909, the house was taken on a long lease by Arthur Lee and his wife Ruth (an American heiress). Lee immediately re-engaged Blomfield to undertake a restoration of the interior. At the same time, Henry Avray Tipping undertook the design of several walled gardens from 1911 to 1912. In 1912, after the death of the last of the house's ancestral owners Henry Delaval Astley, Ruth Lee and her sister purchased the property and later gave it to Arthur Lee.

During the First World War, the house became a hospital and then a convalescent home for officers. After the war, Chequers became a private home again (now furnished with many 16th-century antiques and tapestries and the Cromwellian antiquities), and the childless Lees formed a plan. While previous Prime Ministers had always belonged to the landed classes, the post-First World War era was bringing in a new breed of politician. These men did not have the spacious country houses of previous prime ministers in which to entertain foreign dignitaries or a tranquil place to relax from the affairs of state. After long discussions with then Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Chequers was given to the nation as a country retreat for the serving Prime Minister under the Chequers Estate Act 1917.[5]

The Lees, by this time Lord and Lady Lee of Fareham, left Chequers on 8 January 1921 after a final dinner at the house. A political disagreement between the Lees and Lloyd George soured the handover, which went ahead nonetheless.

The property houses one of the largest collections of art and memorabilia pertaining to Oliver Cromwell in the country. It also houses many other national antiques and books, held in the famous "long room", including a diary of Admiral Lord Nelson and the Chequers Ring, one of the few surviving pieces of jewellery worn by Elizabeth I. The collection is not open to the public.

Nearby Coombe Hill was part of the estate until the 1920s, when it was given to the National Trust. Coombe Hill and the Chequers Estate are part of the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, designated in 1965. The landscaped park, woodlands and formal gardens surrounding Chequers are listed Grade II on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.

During the early part of the Second World War, it was considered that security at Chequers was inadequate to protect the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill. Therefore, he used Ditchley in Oxfordshire until late 1942, by which time the approach road, clearly visible from the sky, had been camouflaged and other security measures had been put in place.[6] [7]

Chequers under Neville Chamberlain had one telephone – in the kitchen; but Churchill "at once installed a whole battery on his desk and had them in constant use", according to Marshal of the Royal Air Force Lord Portal of Hungerford, who served as Chief of the Air Staff during the Second World War.[8]

21st century

On 1 June 2007, the Chequers estate was designated as a protected site under Section 128 of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005. This specifically criminalised trespass into the estate.[9] In July 2018, Prime Minister Theresa May held a Cabinet meeting at Chequers to agree on the UK's approach to Brexit which became known as the proposed "Chequers plan".[10] In April 2020, Prime Minister Boris Johnson chose to recover at Chequers after being hospitalised at St Thomas's, London, with respiratory complications from COVID-19 which included a three-night stay in ICU.[11]

Location

Downing Street and Chequers are approximately 41miles apart, roughly an hour and a half drive. The Ridgeway National Trail crosses the private drive.

See also

References

Notes

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. M. W. Fletcher, Storm is Coming (London: Andrews, 2016), p. 92
  2. Book: Bertie, Lady Georgina . 1845 . Five generations of a loyal house. Pt. 1, containing the lives of R. Bertie and his son Peregrine, lord Willoughby . 40.
  3. .
  4. Book: Birch (Architect.), John . The Architecture of the Stables and Country Mansions . 1883 . William Blackwood & Sons.
  5. Web site: Chequers Estate Act 1917 . 7 April 2020 . www.legislation.gov.uk.
  6. http://www.ditchley.co.uk/page/75/winston-churchill.htm Winston Churchill
  7. http://www.winstonchurchill.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=410 History Lives at Ditchley and Bletchley – The Churchill Centre
  8. Book: Roberts, Andrew . Andrew Roberts (historian) . Masters and Commanders: The Military Geniuses who Led the West to Victory in World War II . 2009 . Penguin . 978-0-1410-2926-9 . London . 36.
  9. Web site: 22 May 2007 . Home Office Circular 018 / 2007 (Trespass on protected sites – sections 128–131 of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005) . 18 July 2017 . GOV.UK . Home Office . en.
  10. BBC News https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-44749993
  11. Web site: 12 April 2020 . Coronavirus: Boris Johnson says "It could have gone either way" . BBC News.