Nathaniel Newman Sherwood (1846-1916) was born in
France in 1846. His father Newman Sherwood was a builder and he wanted Nathaniel to become an engineer. For two years he was apprenticed to his uncle who was an engineer on the
Great Eastern Railway but this work was not to his liking so in 1862 he entered the firm Hurst and Son who were wholesale seed merchants. After only six years he became a partner in the company. In 1873 he married the owner’s daughter Emma Hurst and the couple went to live in
Streatham. They later moved to a house called Dunedin in Streatham Hills. They had three children two sons and one daughter. Unfortunately his wife Emma died in 1883 at the age of only 43. In 1890 he became the sole owner of Hurst and Son but his two sons assisted him with the operations of the company. He amassed a large fortune and bought numerous properties many of them in
Feering. From about 1890 after the Hill family left he used Prested Hall as a hunting lodge and acquired the other surrounding estates in 1898 (a list of these is shown in the notice above). He continued to live at Streatham Hills for some years then later moved to Prested Hall. He was one of the founders of the National Sweet Pea Society and in 1910 was its president. It was this society that brought him fame in the gardening world as many gardening magazines mentioned his work. In 1910 the United States journal called “The American Florist” published an article about him with accompanying photo which can be seen here He was also the subject of a feature article in 1912 in the English magazine called “The Garden” with a photo which is shown. He was the Treasurer to the Royal Gardeners Orphan Fund and generously donated to this institutions. When the
Royal Horticultural Society decided to create a Victoria Medal of Horticulture, Sherwood was one of the recipients. He died in 1916 and left Prested Hall to his younger son John Edward Newman Sherwood. John Edward Newman Sherwood (1878-1939) called Edward was born in
London. He was educated at
Cheltenham College. In 1896 at the age of 18 he entered his father’s firm of Hurst and Son seed growers and became joint manager with his elder brother William. When his father died in 1916 he and his brother became the sole proprietors. In 1923 he married Florence Sybil Keeling (1895-1987). Like his father he joined many seed and horticultural societies and was an active community member. He was a gifted musician and held many musical events at Prested Hall. He died in 1939 and although the Sherwood family continued to own the Hall they did not live there ever again. It was requisitioned by the army during the War and afterwards was a nursing home. In 1994 it was bought by Real Tennis enthusiast Mike Carter, who turned it into a hotel and built the only privately funded pair of Real Tennis courts in the world. ==References==