Caroline L'Estrange Collyer (1789–1866) built Maison Talbooth (then called Hillands) in about 1850. She commissioned the notable architect from Norwich,
John Brown, to undertake the construction. Caroline was born in 1789 in
Norwich,
Norfolk. Her father was Thomas Glover Ewen (1747–1813) who was a wealthy landowner who lived in
Norwich. Her brother was Thomas L'Estrange Ewen. In 1817 she married the Reverend Edward Collyer who was the only son of Charles Collyer owner of Gunthorpe Hall (which still exists). This family is listed in the book on the gentry called "visitation of
England and Wales. The couple had only one child Louisa Maria Collyer and unfortunately at the age of only 37 Edward died leaving Caroline a widow with one daughter. She erected a memorial in his honour at
Gunthorpe Church which can be seen here Soon after his death she moved to
Dedham and lived in a house at the site of Maison Talbooth in Stratford Road. This house is marked on a 1790 map of Dedham. Her brother Thomas L'Estrange Ewen had bought the Rookery, which is in the same street, several years before so it is likely that she wished to live near him. In the 1830s she and her daughter Louisa spent some time travelling as they were frequently mentioned in the social pages called "Fashionable Arrivals". In 1842 Louisa married the local lawyer Thomas John Barstow and the couple had a large family. Possibly with the thought of accommodating them Caroline decided to build a new house in 1846. The 1851 and 1861 Census shows all of them living at the house with many servants. In 1866 at the age of 77 Caroline died and in the following year the house was put on the market. The advertisement for the sale is shown. The house was bought by Henry Richard Edwards (1830–1906) who lived there with his wife Mary and children for the next twenty years. He was a landowner who had previously worked as a fund broker. He left to live in
Southwold in about 1888 and the house was advertised for sale. ==Later history==