SAXONHOLME
Meeching Road, built c1869
By Carol Walton
Photo by kind permission of Bill Kocher
A Mr George Stone, brewer and coin dealer, was the first occupant of Saxonholme, which was initially called Dacre Villa, he was listed living there with his wife Barbara and their eight children in the 1871 census, having moved from a cottage in South Lane. According to the 1891 census the house was lived in by Mr Thomas Cann, a practicing surgeon. The house was at some time home to Lt-Col. John Orlando Summerhayes who was registered as Licentiate, Royal College of Physicians, London (L.R.C.P.) and also as a Member, Royal College of Surgeons (M.R.C.S.). He was also decorated with the award of Companion, Distinguished Service Order (D.S.O.) and gained the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in the service of the Royal Army Medical Corps.
During the winter of 1918-19 King George V arranged for two Colonels, one of which was John Orlando Summerhayes, to give support to the exiled Habsburg royal family when Austria-Hungary collapsed after the First World War. Colonel Summerhayes was appointed as Ehrenkavalier (Honorary Cavalier) and in February 1919, arrived at Eckartsau, a town in Lower Austria, to protect the imperial family. Being a doctor, John Summerhayes was elected to accompany the sick three year old Felix Habsburg to Switzerland for medical treatment, a decision which probably saved his life.
Saxonholme was noted for its fine display of trees and the extensive garden at the rear was frequently used for fund raising for deserving causes. The house was demolished in 2011 and work starts soon to build a new fire station on the site.