About us

Balcombe Place – One day we will swim on the front lawn again.

A Potted History
of Balcombe Estate

Lady Denman, who recorded one of her hobbies as “bonfires” made Balcombe Place her home in 1914 when she and her husband returned from Australia – after famously naming the capital city, Canberra. Described as ‘an energetic, progressive, liberal, feminist, unorthodox soul,” Lady Denman was a phenomenal woman who fought for women’s rights and pushed the boundaries of society.

In 1917 she became the first President of the National Federation of Women’s Institutes, a post she held until 1946. She was also the first Chairman of the Family Planning Association and President of the Ladies Golf Union. (A keen golfer, Lady Denman laid a course where the ninth hole was so close to the plate glass windows of the dining room that her guests were never brave enough to hit the ball hard and she always won).

Lady
Denman

Lord and Lady Denman – Hosting a shooting party

Wartime Years

The Main Hall – The hub of the Women’s Land Army during the Second World War
Penelope Greenwood and the late Richard Greenwood

In 1952, the Estate passed to Lady Denman’s granddaughter, Penelope Burrell, at just twenty-two years old. Upon her marriage to John Richard Greenwood MBE, the livestock of the home farm were presented to her as a wedding gift, a thoughtful way to avoid tax penalties while maintaining the family’s farming tradition.

Following the deaths of Lord and Lady Denman in 1954, Balcombe Place entered a new era, serving successively as a prep school, a conference centre, and later a care home from 1985 until 2017.

Now in her nineties, Penelope Greenwood remains a spirited presence on the Estate. Passionate about the Estate, she continues to oversee Stone Hall Farm well into her later years, only recently persuaded to retire from driving the tractor herself.

The Next
Chapter

School prospectus. 1955

Balcombe Place
Reborn