Sir John Soane.[2] The appearance of the house had been much altered by the addition of second floors to the original side wings.[3]
When it was built, Twickenham was rural, as can be seen in the engraving Sandycombe Lodge, Twickenham, Villa of J. M. W. Turner (1814) that was engraved by W. B. Cooke after William Havell and is now held at Tate Britain.[4]
Since the sale of Sandycombe Lodge in 1826 by Turner, it has had several owners.
Second World War.[2] The vibrations from the heavy machinery caused damage to the staircase and ceilings of the house.[2] The house was bought by Professor Harold Livermore and his wife Ann in 1947, and they created the Sandycombe Lodge Trust (now Turner's House Trust) in 2005.[2] After Livermore's death in 2010, the house was left to the Trust to be preserved as a monument to Turner.[2]
Many of the house's original features survived, but it needed major restoration work and redecoration.
Heritage Lottery Fund to enable this work to take place.[8]
The year-long renovation, costing £2.4 million, started in March 2016. The restoration of Turner's House is now complete and the house is open to the public; visitors can experience Turner's House as he lived in it, and learn the fascinating stories behind the conservation of this important historic house.
Notes
^On older maps, the street name is spelt Sandycombe Road; an extra 'o' was added in the later 20th century, probably on the orders of the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, to distinguish it from another Sandycombe Road in Richmond and Kew.