On 19 May 2012 at 9:34pm Chris wrote:
Hi guys,
Loving the forum! It's a great thing to see so much interest in the local community - and helpful (hopefully) for me, as I'm looking for information. I work in Pelham House Hotel, and am desperately seeking information on its history. I have floor plans, a written list of occupants and a hundred and one photos of the building during its transformation into the hotel it is today, but the team and I were hoping to put together an exhibition on the house as it was when it was still a private residence - if anyone has any photos or anecdotes, or perhaps knows someone who lived or worked here, we would be delighted to hear from you!
If you have any information at all, or are simply interested in the project as it unfolds, please don't hesitate to contact me; as I say, any information at all will be extremely gratefully received.
On 22 May 2012 at 11:44pm One Time Penpusher wrote:
There won't be many folk around who remember it before ESCC bought it in 1928.
History of Pelham House
1523-1563: John Cotmot, the church warden of St Andrews, lived for at least forty years in a humble dwelling on the site where Pelham House now stands.
1579-1649: The house and land was purchased by George Goring, a lawyer and one of the two MPs for Lewes in 1559 and 1563, who had Cotmotâ??s original building demolished and spent £2,000 on the construction of a mansion â??in stoneâ??, the outline of which is largely preserved in the building we see today. Hopelessly inept with money, he died intestate in 1594, owing the Crown £20,000, a colossal sum for that time. His son, George Goring (II), had great difficulty sorting out his estate but managed to retain the House, where he lived with his wife Anne and their five sons and four daughters. On his death in 1602, it passed to his son George Goring (III), who followed in his grandfatherâ??s footsteps to become one of Lewesâ?? MPs in the 1620s. His unwavering support of the Royalist cause exhausted his fortune and he was forced to sell most of his estates, including the Lewes house.
1649-1653 - The house and its estate, which by now included three other houses, barns, stables, outbuildings, garden, orchards and land elsewhere in the town, was sold for £500 to Parliamentarian Peter Courthope, who became Sheriff of Sussex in 1650. We know little about his short tenancy except that it ended in 1653, when he sold the house to the powerful and wealthy Pelham family, who were to remain in occupancy almost continuously for just over 150 years.
1653-1806: The history of Pelham ownership of the House is long and complex but, in brief, three Thomas Pelhams and two Henry Pelhams were resident there at various times; three of these were MPs for Lewes, holding office in a nearly continuous run from 1695 to 1743. The Thomas Pelham who purchased the House in 1725 left the greatest mark by funding a major refurbishment, which may have included refronting the Elizabethan mansion in the late classical style.
1806-1928: During this period, the ownership of the house passed through a number of hands. These include, in chronological sequence: Wine merchant William Campion, followed by his wife and daughter and her son, attorney John E. Fullager, Brighton brewer William Robins, land agent and magistrate John Ingham Blencowe, spinster Margaret Sikes Duval and stockbroker William Taylor Banks, who bought it for £3,580 in 1926 and spent £2,500 on alterations and decorating.
1928-2003: In September 1928, Pelham House was bought by East Sussex County Council for £7,500 and remained as the Councilâ??s administrative headquarters for more than 75 years. In 1938 a major extension was added to the original building, to house a Council Chamber, committee rooms, offices and storerooms.
2004: Pelham House was bought jointly by a group of four families - and converted into a hotel and conference centre.