The manor was part of the
jointure property of
Anne of Denmark. Repairs were ordered to the lodge and barns in 1608. A new
manor house was built for Basil Brent in 1692. It was acquired in Autumn 1764 by Edward Watts, son of
William Watts, who had been a senior official in the
East India Company, and of his wife, better known as
Begum Johnson. Having passed down the Watts family, it was the scene of a
murder on 21 July 1912 when William Farrow, Edward Hanslope Watts's
gamekeeper, shot his master and then committed
suicide. Robin Watts owned the house until 1939, when it was bought by
Lord Hesketh who handed it over to the
War Office when it was requisitioned in 1941. The mathematician and
cryptologist Alan Turing worked there in the latter part of the war on secure speech "scrambling". Today HMGCC researches, designs, develops and produces communications systems, equipment and related hardware and software. ==Foreign and Commonwealth Office archives==