T
O Hall was born in 1830 at Harpsden Court
near Henley-on-Thames. He was the last of the Halls to live at Harpsden
Court, which had previously been the family home. Harpsden was the
only property the Hall family was allowed to keep at the end of
the Civil War. The family, who had decided to be Cromwellians, had
had to receive a pardon from King Charles II before being allowed
to keep Harpsden. T.O's grandmother, Elizabeth, kept a journal of life there from 1st May1800 ~ 29 January 1804 *; two volumes have survived with 90,000 words - the 75 pages can be seen here. The family lived there until the time of Thomas
Owen, when two factors caused Harpsden to be sold: far more daughters
had survived than sons, and they had had to be provided for, which
helped to impoverish the estate; and, during the early life of T.O.
a very long and bitter law suit was going on, and the Halls were
badly advised by their lawyers and had to sell Harpsden as a result
in order to pay the necessary costs. This meant that T.O started
as the heir to Harpsden, and had the potential to grow up into as
good a landowner with as much care for his tenants as all his predecessors
had had. But when Harpsden was sold, T.O had to have a career, so
he was ordained and became a priest in Rutland, Northants. He married
Eliza, the daughter of the Rev Henry Sewell. T.O was the last landed
gentleman in the family. Although his predecessors had served in
the professions, there had always been Harpsden to come back to
and look forward to, but from that time all the sons had to be self-supporting.
Cecil Gallopine was the seventh of his ten
children and started a new dynasty of the Hall family.
* She records visits from a William Dakin. Read about this King's Cliffe Eccentric in a 2002 monograph by Canon John Bryan with his kind permission.
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