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St. Mary's Parish Church. Standing on the highest point of town, St. Mary's Parish dates back to before the Domesday Book (1086 AD). The church is of saxon origin, with parts dating back to the 12th and 15th centuries. The square flint tower, supported by a 19th century brick buttress, contains a peal of 6 bells, the oldest bearing the date 1606. The church has many monuments, including one to Field Marshall Viscount Shannon (who died in 1740), and is one of the best works by Francois Roubiliac. There is also a brass dedicated to John Selwyn, once a keeper of the Royal Park at Oatlands, and a black marble slab commemorating the work of William Lilly, a famous astrologer of his time, who died in 1681. The church also houses a late 17th century organ case, and in the graveyard lies Edward 'Lumpy' Stevens (d.1821), a well known cricketer whose bowling led to the introduction of the third stump. The Old Manor House The Old Manor
House In Manor Road, Walton-on-Thames is a timber framed building with
tow projecting wings at each end. It is made up of two levels. The house
was built in the 14th Century and was at one time the Manor House of Walton
Leigh. Local tradition says that John Bradshaw once lived in the house,
Bradshaw was the President of the Court that sentenced Charles I to his
death. Gone but not forgotten... Ashley House Ashley House was the most important great house close to the village of Walton-on-Thames, and stood for over 300 years. Built between 1602-1605 for Lady Berkeley, wife of the 7th Lord Berkeley, the Jacobean house cost £3119.4s.7½d. The house passed through many hands over the years, and was once owned by Viscount Shannon, whose memorial still stands in St. Mary's Parish. The size of the estate, once Walton Common was added, rose to 440 acres, and the main drive to the house originally ran into the middle of Walton high street, roughly opposite to where WHSmith is now. Unfortunately, the house was demolished in 1930, and its estate was used to build houses on in the 20's and 30's. Mount Felix The estate
known as Mount Felix dates from around 1840 and lays between the River
Thames and the approach to Walton bridge. The estate was begun by Samuel
Dicker, a wealthy merchant and the builder of the first Walton bridge.
Dicker purchased several pieces of land and at its peak the estate comprised
of around fifty acres. The house of the estate was not built for Samuel
Dicker, it was already there when he purchased the land. Apps Court Apps
court lay about a mile and a half to the North-East of Walton village
but was still within the Parish of Walton. In 1602 the estate was bought
by Francis Leigh who turned the estate into a Deer park and enlarged the
house already there built in 1332 by the Lord Of Apps. In the Hearth Tax
records of 1664 it says that the house contained 39 rooms with fireplaces.
Apps court house was the biggest house in Walton. For more detailed information about Walton-on-Thames, please go to walton-on-thames.org
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