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St Helen's House

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St Helen's House
St Helen's House in its days as Derby School, with the Old Derbeians' war memorial
Map
General information
Architectural stylePalladian
Town or cityKing Street, Derby
CountryEngland
Coordinates52°55′39″N 1°28′50″W / 52.92738°N 1.48065°W / 52.92738; -1.48065
Completed1767
Design and construction
Architect(s)Joseph Pickford

St Helen's House is a Grade I listed building situated in King Street, Derby, England. Now leased as offices, it has been used in the past as a private residence and as an educational establishment.

In 2013, renovation of the main house was completed. Originally it was planned to convert both St. Helen's House and the Pearson Building into a luxury hotel, with an adjoining crescent of new apartments. Due to the economic situation in 2011 this plan was changed, and it was decided to convert the building into an office instead.[1] Renovation of the Pearson Building remains on hold.

Construction

St Helen's House was built between 1766 and 1767 for alderman John Gisborne (of Yoxall Lodge, Staffordshire).[citation needed] The house was built in the Palladian style by architect Joseph Pickford. It originally stood in 80 acres (320,000 m2) of parkland.[2]

Although the interior has been altered, the facade remains intact.[citation needed] It has been described by the Georgian Group, of London, as "one of the finest and largest eighteenth century townhouses to survive in any provincial city".[3]

Strutt family

In 1801, the house was purchased by William Strutt, the eldest son of Jedediah Strutt (a pioneer in the cotton and hosier industry). Following William's death, the house passed to his son Edward, who became MP and Alderman of Derby. He was created Edward Strutt, 1st Baron Belper in 1846. His son, Henry Strutt, 2nd Baron Belper was born in the St. Helen's House in 1840.[citation needed]

Educational use

In 1860 Edward Strutt offered to sell the house to the governors of Derby School. Initially the school could not afford to buy the house, but Edward Strutt, "being desirous of promoting the cause of education in Derby" loaned the house for free, on a temporary basis. The school moved to the house in January 1861 and purchased it from Strutt in 1863, for £3,300. £1,300 of this came from a public subscription and £2,000 from a mortgage raised by Derby Corporation.[citation needed][4]

During World War II the school was evacuated and the buildings were occupied by the Ordnance Survey organisation to undertake the creation of maps used by Allied Forces. In this period the school was housed first at Overton Hall, Ashover (September 1939 – June 1940) and secondly at Amber Valley Camp at Woolley Moor (June 1940 until July 1945).[citation needed] The school returned to St Helen's House in September 1945. [5]

Derby School moved from St Helen's House in 1966 when it moved to a new purpose-built complex in Littleover called Moorway Lane. Following this move St. Helen's House was used as the Joseph Wright School of Art and, from 1972, as an Adult Education centre. Due to the deterioration of the external fabric of the buildings, the centre was moved and the building became vacant in 2004.[citation needed]

St. Helen's House

Sale and planned conversion

It was estimated that the building required £5 million of repair work.[3] Unable to afford this, in November 2006 Derby City Council sold the house (and the neighboring Pearson Building) on a 299-year lease, to the property developer Richard Blunt.[6]

The original plans were to convert the two buildings into a fifty-room hotel, and to construct an apartment block within a crescent where the current Chapel, gymnasium and craft workshops stand. Planning permission was granted in 2009.[7]

During 2008 and 2009 the building was made wind and weather-proof. The interior was generally tidied up and the educational equipment removed.[citation needed]

In 2011, due to the economic climate, the hotel development proposals were cancelled.[1] In July 2011 a revised planning application was submitted which proposed converting the two buildings into offices.[citation needed]

The building was featured in a short film entitled Derby School – the Sixties Revisited, which was made in September 2012. The film revealed the then dilapidated state of the rooms; including peeling paint and remnants of original blackboards.[8]

Following the completion of repairs and renovations to St. Helen's House, in October 2013 a Blue Plaque was placed by Derby Civic Society and Derby City Council commemorating the house as the former residence of William Strutt and Rev. Thomas Gisborne.[9] In 2013 a firm of accountants took out a lease on the offices within the house.[1]

As of 2013 the Pearson Building alterations are on hold however plans for serviced apartments are in the works. The original link structure (which held the school bell and the entrance for all pupils except 6th formers) between St. Helen's House and the Pearson Building has been demolished and replaced by a new decorative wall. The former chemistry laboratory, the original headmaster's house (known by many former boys as the Armoury), the cloisters, the wooden gymnasium, the former woodwork rooms and the chapel show a lot of disrepair.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c Green, Kirsty (15 December 2012). "Accountancy firm to move into listed building". Derby Evening Telegraph. Archived from the original on 27 November 2013.
  2. ^ Ghosts of Derby Archived March 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b "St Helens House, Derby". The Georgian Group. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  4. ^ Derbyshire Times newspaper December 1860[when?]
  5. ^ Old Derbeian Society school magazine The Derbeian, December 1945
  6. ^ "Richard Blunt - Listed Building Restoration, Residential and Commercial Lettings". www.richardblunt.com. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
  7. ^ "Next stage in restoration of historic house". Derby Telegraph. 6 August 2009. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  8. ^ "Derby School – the Sixties Revisited" a short film shot in St Helens House in September 2012
  9. ^ "Blue Plaque officially unveiled". Smith Cooper Ltd. 3 October 2013. Retrieved 16 June 2016.