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Templemere stands on land which formed part of the Oatlands Chase surrounding
the Royal palace at Oatlands in Tudor times.
In 1669, when Queen Henriette widow of Charles II died,
the ruined palace and its land reverted to the Crown. It passed through
several royal hands including the 7th Earl of Lincoln who built Oatlands
House on the site (now the Oatlands Park Hotel).
In 1730, following the death of his father and elder
brother, Henry Pelham-Clinton became the 9th Earl of Lincoln and, in 1768,
became the 2nd Duke of Newcastle under Lyme.
The grounds were altered for the new Duke by landscape
architcct William Kent to include a circular temple above the original
Broadwater lake, based on the Temple of Vesta at Tivoli.
The Oatlands Estate was subsequently bought by the Duke
of York, son of George III, but when he died later owners sold the land
off in various lots. Large houses were built on each lot, on the ridge
overlooking the Broadwater, each with extensive grounds. And the 19th
century ‘Templemere’ house incorporated the Temple of Vesta.
The house and the temple were still intact in 1928 when
it came up for auction by Hamptons and Sons and some time later, the whole
of the current Templemere estate came into the ownership of Donald Wilson
and later Robert and Ruby Wilson. In March 1961 they sold it to SRL Investments
Ltd, who through Span Developments created the present estate.
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