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Die Geschichte des Gebäudes vom LTC Eastbourne

The historic houseLTC Eastbourne is situated in a historic house which was home to one of England’s most important aristocratic families - the Dukes of Devonshire - between 1782 and 1950.

There has been a house here for at least seven hundred years.  The oldest parts of the present house were probably built in the years after 1544, when it was known as Bourne Place.  A hundred years later, the house passed to the Wilson family, who used it as a farmhouse.

The Wilson Family

WilsonThere are two stories about the Wilsons.  Between 1642 and 1648, there was a civil war between King Charles I and Parliament.  The Wilsons were one of very few families in this part of England who supported the King, and the local Parliamentary leaders sent soldiers to search the house.

“Please don’t wake my husband up,” Mrs Wilson told the soldiers.  “He’s very sick and needs to sleep.”  She gave the soldiers a meal of wheatear pie (wheatears are a kind of bird), while upstairs her husband was frantically burning all his letters.  When he had finished, he came downstairs, and the soldiers searched the house but found nothing.

Many years later, King Charles II invited the Wilsons to London, where Mrs Wilson cooked him wheatear pie for lunch.

Another story concerns a young man called Thomas Wilson, who was very fond of gambling.  Eventually he lost so much money that he was unable to pay his debts, so his creditors kidnapped him, took him to Jamaica and sold him into slavery.
It is said that Thomas’ master died while he was in Jamaica, and his mistress offered to set him free if he married her.  Thomas said no – he would rather be a slave!  After a total of seven years, his father managed to buy him and bring him back to England. 

Spencer Compton

Spencer ComptonIn 1724, the Wilsons sold the house to Spencer Compton, a leading politician for £4,000.  Compton asked one of the Compton Place with Venus and Adonisbest architects in the country, Colen Campbell, to build a bigger house around the old house.  Campbell designed the house in the fashionable Palladian style, but he never visited the house, and his assistant, John Lane, was not familiar with Palladian and so decided to add some Baroque elements to the design of the house.

Early in the Nineteenth Century, the outside of the house and the windows were remodelled in the Regency style, and so the house has a unique blend of three different styles.

Spencer Compton became Prime Minister in 1742, and, expecting the King to visit Compton Place (as the house was now known), he had had a beautiful bedroom with a picture of Venus and Adonis on the ceiling built for him.  Unfortunately Compton died soon afterwards - quite possibly the stress of being Prime Minister killed him - and the King never came to stay in the bedroom.

Royal Visits

Royal VisitBut other members of the Royal Family have stayed here.  King George III was a frequent visitor in the summer of 1780, King George V lived here for six weeks in 1935, and the current Queen visited the house as a child in 1936 and spent two weeks here with her sister Princess Margaret in 1946.

Alexandra Romanova

Alexandra RomanovaIn 1892, the house was visited by an 18 year-old German princess, Alexandra of Hesse, who scratched her name on the window using her diamond ring (you can still see her name on the window today).

Two years later, Alexandra went to Russia, where she married Tsar Nicholas II.  Alexandra scratched her name on several windows in St Petersburg and Moscow too, but her life ended in tragedy.  In 1917, the Tsar was overthrown by a revolution and the Imperial family was imprisoned until December 1918, when Nicholas, Alexandra and all their children were shot by the Bolsheviks.

The Dukes of Devonshire

Eastbourne PierIn 1782, Lady Elizabeth Compton married into one of the wealthiest families in England: the Cavendish family – the Dukes of Devonshire.  The Cavendishes mostly used the house as a summer home or as a home for their children.

In the 1830s and 1840s, the seventh Duke of Devonshire developed Eastbourne as a holiday resort “built by gentlemen for gentlemen”, one of the best planned resort towns on the south coast.  It is thanks to the Duke and his insistence that there should be no shops by the beach that Eastbourne has such an elegant seafront.

In 1950, the tenth Duke of Devonshire died of a heart attack while he was visiting his son’s family at Compton Place.  When his son became the eleventh Duke, he moved out of the house, which was then closed down.

LTC Ladies College of English

In 1954, the Duke allowed a Mr Schwartz to open a residential language school / finishing school for ladies in Compton Park (the new name for Compton Place).  The “Language Tuition Centre”or "LTC Ladies' College of English" was highly successful and opened two more schools in London and Norwich. 

But over time, fewer and fewer young girls dreamed of becoming a “lady” rather than a doctor, a lawyer or an architect, and the demand for LTC’s courses declined. In 1983, LTC admitted its first male students and became a more conventional language school. 

In 2010, LTC Eastbourne became the headquarters of the Language Teaching Centres group of schools, which has schools in London and Brighton plus an affiliated school in Paris.

Zeitgeschichte des Gebäudes
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