Kezia Peache (1820 – 16 March 1899) was an English church organist and a benefactor. She funded cottages in Wimbledon,
a college of Divinity and the repair of
Layer Marney Tower
Layer Marney Tower is an incomplete early Tudor country house, with gardens and parkland, dating from about 1523, in Layer Marney, Essex, England, between Colchester and Maldon. The building was designated Grade I listed in 1952.
The large ga ...
.
Life
Peache was born in
Lambeth
Lambeth () is a district in South London, England, which today also gives its name to the (much larger) London Borough of Lambeth. Lambeth itself was an ancient parish in the county of Surrey. It is situated 1 mile (1.6 km) south of Charin ...
in 1820. Her parents were Alice (née Coventry) and James Courthope Peache. They had twelve children, but many of them died as children. Their father dealt in timber, he built barges and he owned them.
Peache was educated at Prospect House School. In 1845 she went on a tour of Europe with her elder brother Clement, before returning to live with her brother in Mangotsfield where
Alfred
Alfred may refer to:
Arts and entertainment
*''Alfred J. Kwak'', Dutch-German-Japanese anime television series
* ''Alfred'' (Arne opera), a 1740 masque by Thomas Arne
* ''Alfred'' (Dvořák), an 1870 opera by Antonín Dvořák
*"Alfred (Interlu ...
was a perpetual curate. She was there until 1850 when her brother married and she returned to Wimbledon.
[
She and her brother Alfred came into a large and unexpected fortune. Their elder brother, Clement, died suddenly. He would have been their father's presumed heir, but within weeks their father died and his possessions needed to be reassigned by the executors and that was Kezia and Alfred. She and Alfred, gained an equal share in their father's legacy.][
According to one source they prayed together and decided that they needed to build a college of divinity. Alfred paid for the construction of the London College of Divinity and when his money was gone then Kezia agreed to contribute from her fortune.
From the 1850s she was a major supporter of the Cottage Improvement Society and their work in Wimbledon to create a home for people of limited means. She funded the construction of Bertram Cottages, cottages of Belvedere Square, more off Church Road and Courthope Villas. The Bertram Colleges were designed by Henry Charles Forde whose main business was laying international telephone cables. Forde's designs for the cottages give some of them have a "K" or a "P" worked into the design of the brickwork to recognise Kezia Peache.
In 1854 she became the organist at St Mary's Church in Wimbledon and she was also a Sunday School teacher there. The east window of the church was created as a memorial to her father.][
In 1879 Peache and her brother took an interest in a Tudor palace in Essex and these philanthropists became the Lord and Lady of the Manor of Layer Marney.][ The Peache siblings paid for the substantial repairs required to ]Layer Marney Tower
Layer Marney Tower is an incomplete early Tudor country house, with gardens and parkland, dating from about 1523, in Layer Marney, Essex, England, between Colchester and Maldon. The building was designated Grade I listed in 1952.
The large ga ...
.
Peache died in Wimbledon
Wimbledon most often refers to:
* Wimbledon, London, a district of southwest London
* Wimbledon Championships, the oldest tennis tournament in the world and one of the four Grand Slam championships
Wimbledon may also refer to:
Places London
* W ...
. The college of divinity that she and her brother funded lasted for 156 years before it closed in 2019 with a falling role and poor finances.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Peache, Kezia
1820 births
1899 deaths
People from Lambeth
British philanthropists
19th-century English organists
British women philanthropists
British women organists
British Anglicans
People from Wimbledon, London