Lechlade Manor

Later owners included Isabel, wife of Roger de Mortimer, and Richard of Cornwall, second son of King John.

Encumbered by very considerable debts, Sir Jacob sold the manor and, after a further succession of sales, it was bought by George Milward in the early 19th century.

[a][3][4] The small amount of secular building he undertook was mainly in London, or in the West, including Treberfydd in Wales,[5] and Quar Wood and Lechlade, both in Gloucestershire.

[12] They note the inspiration for the Cloister Court at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, a sequence of buildings Pearson constructed some twenty years later, almost at the end of his life.

[14] Historic England's listing record states that the ground floor interiors retain much of Pearson's original work.