
Bruce Castle (formerly theLordship House) is aGrade I listed 16th-century[1]manor house inLordship Lane,Tottenham, London. It is named after theHouse of Bruce who formerly owned the land on which it is built. Believed to stand on the site of an earlier building, about which little is known, the current house is one of the oldest surviving English brick houses. It was remodelled in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.
The house has been home to SirWilliam Compton, theBarons Coleraine and SirRowland Hill, among others. After serving as a school during the 19th century, when a large extension was built to the west, it was converted into a museum exploring the history of the areas now constitutingLondon Borough of Haringey and, on the strength of its connection with Sir Rowland Hill, the history of theRoyal Mail. The building also houses the archives of theLondon Borough of Haringey. Since 1892 the grounds have been a public park, Tottenham's oldest.

The nameBruce Castle is derived from theHouse of Bruce, who had historically owned a third of themanor of Tottenham. However, there was no castle in the area, and it is unlikely that the family lived nearby.[3] Upon his accession tothe Scottish throne in 1306,Robert I of Scotland forfeited his lands in England, including the Bruce holdings in Tottenham,[3] ending the connection between the Bruce family and the area. The former Bruce land in Tottenham was granted toRichard Spigurnell andThomas Hethe.[4]
The three parts of the manor of Tottenham were united in the early 15th century under the Gedeney family and have remained united since.[4] In all early records, the building is referred to as theLordship House. The nameBruce Castle first appears to have been adopted byHenry Hare, 2nd Baron Coleraine (1635–1708),[3] althoughDaniel Lysons speculates inThe Environs of London (1795) that the use of this name dates to the late 13th century.[4]

A detached, cylindricalTudor tower stands immediately to the south-west of the house, and is generally considered to be the earliest part of the building;[5] however, Lysons believes it to have been a later addition.[4] The tower is built of local red brick, and is 21 ft (6.4 m) tall, with walls 3 ft (0.91 m) thick.[5] In 2006, excavations revealed that it continues for some distance below the current ground level.[6] It was described in 1829 as being over a deep well, and being used as a dairy.[7]
Sources disagree on the house's initial construction date, and no records survive of its construction. There is some archaeological evidence dating parts of the building to the 15th century;[5] William Robinson'sHistory and Antiquities of the Parish of Tottenham (1840) suggests a date of about 1514,[8] although theRoyal Commission on Historic Monuments attributes it to the late 16th century.Nikolaus Pevsner speculates the front may have formed part of acourtyard house of which the remainder has disappeared.[9]
The front of the mansion has been substantially remodelled. The house is made of red brick withashlarquoining and the principal façade, terminated by symmetrical matching bays, has tall paned windows. The house and detached tower are among the earliest uses of brick as the principal building material for an English house.[10]
Henry Hare, 2nd Baron Coleraine (1635–1708) oversaw a substantial remodelling of the house in 1684, and much of the existing south façade dates from that time. The end bays were heightened, and the central porch was rebuilt with stone quoins andpilasters, abalustraded top, a small tower andcupola.[9] A plan from 1684 shows the hall in the house's centre, with service rooms to the west and the main parlour to the east. On the first floor, the dining room was over the hall, the main bedchamber over the kitchen, and a lady's chamber over the porch.[9]
In the early 18th centuryHenry Hare, 3rd Baron Coleraine (1694–1749) oversaw a remodelling of the north of the house, that added a range of rooms to the north and the Coleraine coat of arms to the pediment of the north façade.[9] In the late 18th century, under the ownership ofJames Townsend, the narrow east façade of the house was remodelled into an entrance front, and given the appearance of a typicalGeorgian house. At the same time, the south front's gabled attics were removed, giving the house's southern elevation its current appearance.[9] An inventory of the house made in 1789 in preparation for its sale listed a hall, saloon, drawing room, dining room and breakfast parlour on the ground floor, with a library and billiard room on the first floor.[9]
In the early 19th century, the house's west wing was demolished, leaving it with the asymmetrical appearance it retains today.[11] The house was converted into a school, and in 1870 a three-story extension was built in theGothic Revival style to the northwest of the house.[9]
The 2006 excavations by theMuseum of London uncovered the chalk foundations of an earlier building on the site, of which nothing is known.[6]Court rolls of 1742 refer to the repair of adrawbridge, implying that the building then had amoat.[5] A 1911 archaeological journal made passing reference to "the recent levelling of the moat".[12]

It is generally believed the house's first owner was SirWilliam Compton,Groom of the Stool toHenry VIII and one of the period's prominent courtiers, who acquired the manor of Tottenham in 1514.[5] However, there is no evidence of Compton's living in the house, and there is some evidence the building dates to a later period.[5]
The earliest known reference to the building dates from 1516, when Henry VIII met his sisterMargaret, Queen of Scots, at "Maister Compton's House beside Tottenham".[8] The Comptons owned the building throughout the 16th century, but few records of the family or the building survive.[14]
In the early 17th century,Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset andLady Anne Clifford owned the house. Sackville ran up high debts through gambling and extravagant spending; he leased what was then still known as "The Lordship House" toThomas Peniston, whose wife, Martha, daughter of SirThomas Temple, was said to be his mistress.[15] The house was later sold to wealthyNorfolk landownerHugh Hare.[16]
Hugh Hare (1606–1667) had inherited a large amount of money from his great-uncle SirNicholas Hare,Master of the Rolls. On the death of his father, his mother had remarriedHenry Montagu, 1st Earl of Manchester, allowing the young Hugh Hare to rise rapidly inCourt and social circles. He married Montagu's daughter by his first marriage and purchased the manor of Tottenham, including the Lordship House, in 1625, and was ennobled asBaron Coleraine shortly thereafter.[16]
As he was closely associated with the court ofCharles I, Hare's fortunes went into decline during theEnglish Civil War. Hiscastle at Longford and his house inTotteridge were seized by Parliamentary forces, and returned upon theRestoration in a severe state of disrepair.[16] Records of Tottenham from the period are now lost, and the ownership and condition of the Lordship House during theCommonwealth of England are unknown.[16] Hugh Hare died at his home in Totteridge in 1667, having choked to death on a bone eatingturkey while laughing and drinking,[16] and was succeeded by his sonHenry Hare, 2nd Baron Coleraine.[17]

Henry Hare (1635–1708) settled at the Lordship House, renaming it Bruce Castle in honour of the area's historic connection with theHouse of Bruce.[3] Hare was a noted historian and author of the first history of Tottenham. He grew up at the Hare family house at Totteridge, and it is not known when he moved to Tottenham. At the time of the birth of his first child, Hugh, in 1668, the family were still living in Totteridge, while by the time of the death of his first wife Constantia, in 1680, the family were living in Bruce Castle. According to Hare, Constantia was buried inAll Hallows Church in Tottenham. However, theparish register for the period is complete and makes no mention of her death or burial.[18]
Following the death of Constantia, Hare married Sarah Alston. They had been engaged in 1661, but she had instead marriedJohn Seymour, 4th Duke of Somerset. There is evidence that during Sarah's marriage to Seymour and Hare's marriage to Constantia, a close relationship was sustained between them.[19]
The house was substantially remodelled in 1684, following Henry Hare's marriage to the dowager Duchess of Somerset, and much of the existing south façade dates from this time.[9] The façade's central tower with abelvedere is amotif of the EnglishRenaissance of the late 16th/early 17th centuries.Hatfield House, also close to London, had a similar central tower constructed in 1611, as doesBlickling Hall in Norfolk, built circa 1616.
Although sources such as Pegram speculate that Constantia committed suicide in the face of a continued relationship between Hare and the Duchess of Somerset,[19] little is known about her life and the circumstances of her early death, and her ghost reputedly haunts the castle.[20]
The earliest recorded reference to the ghost appeared in 1858—almost two hundred years after her death—in theTottenham & Edmonton Advertiser.
A lady of our acquaintance was introduced at a party to an Indian Officer who, hearing that she came from Tottenham, eagerly asked if she had seen the Ghostly Lady of Bruce Castle. Some years before he had been told the following story by a brother officer when encamped on a march in India. One of the Lords Coleraine had married a beautiful lady and while she was yet in her youth had been seized with a violent hatred against her—whether from jealousy or not is not known. He first confined her to the upper part of the house and subsequently still more closely to the little rooms of the clock turret. These rooms looked on the balconies: the lady one night succeeded in forcing her way out and flung herself with child in arms from the parapet. The wild despairing shriek aroused the household only to find her and her infant in death's clutches below. Every year as the fearful night comes round (it is in November) the wild form can be seen as she stood on the fatal parapet, and her despairing cry is heard floating away on the autumnal blast.[18][21]
The legend has now been largely forgotten, and there have been no reported sightings of the ghost in recent times.[20]
Sarah Hare died in 1692 and was buried inWestminster Abbey,[19] and Hare in 1708, to be succeeded by his grandsonHenry Hare, 3rd Baron Coleraine. Henry Hare was a leadingantiquary, residing only briefly at Bruce Castle between lengthy tours of Europe.
The house was remodelled again under the 3rd Baron Coleraine's ownership. An extra range of rooms was added to the north, and the pediment of the north front ornamented with a large coat of the Coleraine arms.[9]
Hare's marriage was not consummated. His only child was born to a French woman, Rosa du Plessis; Henrietta Rosa Peregrina was born in France in 1745.[22] Hare died in 1749 leaving his estates to the four-year-old Henrietta, but her claim was rejected owing to her French nationality. After many years of legal challenges, the estates, including Bruce Castle, were granted to her husbandJames Townsend, whom she had married at age 18.[22]
James Townsend was a leading citizen of the day. He served as amagistrate, was Member of Parliament forWest Looe, and in 1772 becameLord Mayor of London, while Henrietta was a prominent artist, many of whoseengravings of 18th-century Tottenham survive in the Bruce Castle Museum.[22]
After 1764, under the ownership of James Townsend, the house was remodelled again. The narrow east front was remodelled into an entrance front, and given the appearance of a typicalGeorgian house, while the gabled attics on the south front were removed, giving the south façade the appearance it has today.[9]
James and Henrietta Townsend's son, Henry Hare Townsend, showed little interest in the area or in the traditional role of theLord of the Manor. After leasing the house to a succession of tenants, the house and grounds were sold in 1792 to Thomas Smith ofGray's Inn as a country residence.[22]
John Eardley Wilmot (c. 1749 – 23 June 1815) was Member of Parliament forTiverton (1776–1784) andCoventry (1784–1796), and in 1783 led the Parliamentary Commission investigating the events that led to theAmerican Revolution. He also led the processing of compensation claims, and the supply of basic housing and provisions, for the 60,000 Loyalist refugees who arrived in England after the independence of the United States.[11]
Following the beginning of theFrench Revolution in 1789, a second wave of refugees arrived in England. Although the British government did not offer them organised relief, Wilmot, in association withWilliam Wilberforce,Edmund Burke andGeorge Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham, founded "Wilmot's Committee", which raised funds to provide accommodation and food, and found employment for refugees from France, large numbers of whom settled in the Tottenham area.[11]
In 1804, Wilmot retired from public life and moved to Bruce Castle to write his memoirs of the American Revolution and his role in the investigations of its causes and consequences. They were published shortly before his death in 1815.[11] After Wilmot's death, London merchant John Ede purchased the house and its grounds, and demolished the building's west wing.[11]

Hill and his brothers had taken over the management of their father's school inBirmingham in 1819, which opened a branch at Bruce Castle in 1827, withRowland Hill as Headmaster. The school was run alongradical lines inspired by Hill's friendsThomas Paine,Richard Price andJoseph Priestley;[23] all teaching was on the principle that the teacher's role is to instill the desire to learn, not to impart facts,corporal punishment was abolished and alleged transgressions were tried by a court of pupils, while the school taught a radical (for the time) curriculum including foreign languages, science and engineering.[24][25] Among other pupils, the school taught the sons of many London-based diplomats, particularly from the newly independent nations of South America, and the sons of computing pioneerCharles Babbage.[24]
In 1839 Rowland Hill, who had written an influential proposal on postal reform, was appointed as head of theGeneral Post Office (where he introduced the world's first postage stamps), leaving the school in the hands of his younger brother Arthur Hill.[24]
During the period of the School's operation, the character of the area had changed beyond recognition. Historically, Tottenham had consisted of four villages onErmine Street (later theA10 road), surrounded by marshland and farmland.[26] The construction of theNorthern and Eastern Railway in 1840, with stations atTottenham Hale andMarsh Lane (later Northumberland Park), made commuting from Tottenham to central London feasible for the first time (albeit by a circuitous eight-mile route viaStratford, more than double the distance of the direct road route), as well as providing direct connections to thePort of London.[27] In 1872 theGreat Eastern Railway opened a direct line fromEnfield toLiverpool Street station,[28] including a station atBruce Grove, close to Bruce Castle;[29] the railway provided subsidised workmen's fares to allow poor commuters to live in Tottenham and commute to work in central London.[30] As a major rail hub, Tottenham grew into a significant residential and industrial area; by the end of the 19th century, the only remaining undeveloped areas were the grounds of Bruce Castle itself, and the waterlogged floodplains of theRiver Lea atTottenham Marshes and of theRiver Moselle atBroadwater Farm.[26]
In 1877 Birkbeck Hill retired from the post of headmaster, ending his family's association with the school. The school closed in 1891, andTottenham Council purchased the house and grounds. The grounds of the house were opened to the public as Bruce Castle Park in June 1892,[31] the first public park in Tottenham.[32] The house opened to the public as Bruce Castle Museum in 1906.[33][34]
Bruce Castle was among the buildings mentioned inJohn Abraham Heraud's 1820Spenserian epic,Tottenham, aromantic depiction of the life of Robert the Bruce:[35]
Lovely is moonlight to the poet's eye,
That in a tide of beauty bathes the skies,
Filling the balmy air with purity,
Silent and lone, and on the greensward dies—
But when on ye her heavenly slumber lies,
TOWERS OF BRUS! 'tis more than lovely then.—
For such sublime associations rise,
That to young fancy's visionary ken,'Tis like a maniac's dream—fitful and still again.[36]
Bruce Castle is now a museum, holding the archives of theLondon Borough of Haringey, and housing a permanent exhibition on the past, present and future of Haringey and its predecessor boroughs, and temporary displays on the history of the area.[32] Other exhibits include an exhibition on Rowland Hill and postal history,[35] a significant collection of early photography, a collection of historic manorial documents and court rolls related to the area,[37] and one of the few copies available for public reading of theSpurs Opus, the complete history ofTottenham Hotspur.[38] In 1949, the building wasGrade I listed;[39] the round tower was separately Grade I listed at the same time,[40] and the 17th-century southern and western boundary walls of the park wereGrade II listed in 1974.[41][42] In 1969 the castle became home to the regimental museum of theMiddlesex Regiment[43] whose collection was subsequently transferred to theNational Army Museum.[44] The museum holds a significant collection of the paintings ofBeatrice Offor (1864–1920).[45]
Nearby professionalfootball clubTottenham Hotspur's full club badge depicts Bruce Castle alongside other local local iconography including 7 trees in reference toThe Seven Sisters as well as two lions representing the Northumberland/Percy noble family.[46]
In July 2006 a major community archaeological dig was organised in the grounds by theMuseum of London Archaeological Archive and Research Centre, as part of the centenary celebrations of the opening of Bruce Castle Museum,[6] in which large numbers of local youths took part.[47][48] As well as large quantities of discarded everyday objects, the chalk foundations of what appears to be an earlier house on the site were discovered.[6]
In 2012 the public grounds at Bruce Castle were used for PARK ART in Haringey, part of the borough'scultural Olympiad offer for 2012. Up Projects, in partnership with Haringey Council and funded byArts Council England, commissionedBen Long to create "Lion Scaffolding Sculpture",[49] a nine-metre tall classical lion on a plinth that was constructed from builder'sscaffolding. Themonumental sculpture, created for the front lawn of Bruce Castle Museum, referenced the traditional archetype of the regal lion commonly found in the grounds of stately homes, but also the heraldic emblem ofRobert the Bruce, therefore reflecting on the heritage of the building. Built in situ over four weeks, the fabrication became a durational performance, highlighting the role that work and labour play in the development of any artistic or creative pursuit.[50][51]
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