Rhoda Wyburn Explained

Rhoda Wyburn (25 August 1841 - 8 May 1934) was an English milliner who with her sister Emily ran a successful business in Regent Street that enabled them to buy Hadley Manor near Chipping Barnet in north London. The sisters were committed Methodists who donated funds to establish Methodist churches in north London and elsewhere.

Early life

Rhoda Wyburn was born in Somerset, on 25 August 1841, to Robert and Susanna Wyburn. She had a sister Emily (c. 1837 - March 1913). Their father was a cabinet-maker and Methodist preacher who owned the Woolavington Throckmorton manor house in Woolavington, Somerset.[1] [2]

Career

With her sister Emily, Rhoda Wyburn ran a millinery business in Bridgwater, Somerset, and later had premises at 246 Regent Street, London, under the name Mademoiselle Emelie.[1]

Hadley Manor

In 1890,[3] the sisters bought Hadley Manor from Julia Hyde, widow of Henry Hyde of Ely Place, Holborn, thus becoming lords of the Manor of Hadley.[4] The manor house stood on the eastern side of Hadley Green Road, to the north of Chipping Barnet, until it was destroyed by fire in the early 1930s. It was purchased by East Barnet council in 1934 on Rhoda's death[3] and demolished in 1935. At about the same time, Rhoda gave to the public the land known as Hadley Manor Fields to the rear of the manor house which was combined with purchases from adjacent estates such as the Hadley Hurst Estate and Gladsmuir Estate to form King George's Fields which were created to mark the jubilee of King George V.[5] Nothing remains of the manor house today and the site is used as the western entrance to King George's Fields.

Methodism

A Miss Wyburn laid the foundation stone for the High Barnet Methodist Church in 1891. It was demolished in the 1980s apart from the spires which are now incorporated into The Spires Shopping Centre. Miss Wyburn also funded the first Wesleyan Methodist Chapel in the area which was "a good iron hut" transferred to East Barnet from Hadley Manor in 1915.[6] [7]

In Somerset, Miss E. Wyburn laid the foundation stone for the "New" Wesleyan Methodist Church in Middlezoy in 1898.[8] In 1901, a Miss Wyburn laid the foundation stone for the Queen Victoria's Seamen's Rest home in Jeremiah Street, Poplar.

Death and legacy

Rhoda Wyburn died on 8 May 1934. A notice in The London Gazette gave her address as Hadley Manor and 19 Burton Road, Branksome Park, Bournemouth. The executors of her Will were Mrs Susan Emily Evans and John William Pepper.[9] She left no descendants. A legacy from the Wyburn family continues to fund Methodist activity in Barnet.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.barnetbrookside.co.uk/content/pages/documents/1417383507.pdf "The Wyburns of Hadley Manor"
  2. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol8/pp210-223#anchorn61 Woolavington Throckmorton Manor
  3. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol5/pp263-266 Monken Hadley: Manor and other estates.
  4. Book: Duncan, Andrew.. Andrew Duncan's favourite London walks: 50 classic routes exploring London's heritage. 2007. New Holland Publishers. London. 978-1-84537-454-9. 215.
  5. https://www.barnet.gov.uk/dam/jcr:f05db966-aa18-42aa-914b-a2efa885b6c3/planning_monken_hadley_conservation_area_appraisal.pdf Monken Hadley Conservation Area Character Appraisal Statement
  6. http://www.barnetbrookside.co.uk/history/ A Short History of Methodism in Barnet.
  7. http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/fcfcfcc3-5d32-440f-bc22-bf82d10c9fb4 Brookside Methodist Church, Cat Hill, East Barnet.
  8. http://dbown100.tripod.com/WMC.htm The Wesleyan Methodist Church in Middlezoy.
  9. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/34075/page/5011/data.pdf "Re Miss Rhoda Wyburn, Deceased."
  10. http://www.barnetbrookside.co.uk/content/pages/documents/1425502105.pdf The Messenger