It has now been built over and the name remains for a part of Twickenham in optional – station-centric terms – considered St Margarets.
Some frescoes and a fireplace surround dating from the middle of the 16th century were discovered when the house was demolished which suggests there may have been an earlier building.
He died two years later and the estate was acquired by Richard Owen Cambridge (1717–1802), a celebrated poet.
After he died in 1802 the house was occupied by his daughter Charlotte, and then in 1823 by his son George Owen Cambridge (1756–1841), who was an archdeacon.
The property passed to a daughter Lady Caroline Chichester in 1860 and then to a grandson Sir Edward John Dean Paul, 4th Baronet.