|
|
|
|
|
Long DittonDitton was a Saxon settlement in England which, by domesday, was already splitting between the riverside parish at Thames Ditton, and the older area which now forms Long Ditton. Despite an attractive mix of period properties and a pleasant community feel, there are few traces of Long Ditton's more distant past to be found around town. In the 16th century the manor fell into the hands of a George Evelyn, whose family took a dynastic hold over the town's prosperity. The Evelyns had the foresight, or good fortune, to be producing gunpowder during a rather explosive period of history. Gunpowder mills proliferated across Long Ditton and beyond to keep up with demand, and the Evelyns set about buying up much of the country that was busy blowing itself up with the family's finest powder. George's grandson John Evelyn, who gained posthumous fame for his diaries, had to flee the country during the civil war as swathes of family land fell awkwardly between Royalist and Roundhead strongholds. It was John who gleaned further prestige for the family name with his assimilation into the Royal Court of Charles II. When St Mary's Church was built in 1880, and monuments erected to commemorate local dignitaries, there were few other Long Ditton celebrities to celebrate, and the place became something of an Evelyn shrine.
|
 |
|
| Copyright 2005-2009 OnPedia.com. All Rights Reserved |
|
|