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Tranby Croft

Tranby Croft
Tranby Croft about 1920
Assembled partygoers at Tranby Croft, 11 September 1890. The royal baccarat scandal. Pictured are Sir William Gordon-Cumming, Capt. Berkeley Levett, Edward, Prince of Wales and others

Tranby Croft is a large Grade II listed Victorian country house[1] and estate at Anlaby, near Hull in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The house is now the co-educational, independent day school, Tranby School.

The house is built in white brick with ashlar dressing in three storeys with a nine bay frontage.[2]

History

Tranby Croft was built c. 1874 by Hull shipowner Arthur Wilson (1836–1909). In 1890 the house was the location of the royal baccarat scandal, which involved accusations that Sir William Gordon-Cumming, 4th Baronet, had cheated at illegal card games attended by Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. The reputational damage was long-lasting. In Moonraker (1955) by Ian Fleming, Hugo Drax cheating at cards is characterised as "Tranby Croft all over again".[3]

Arthur was succeeded by his son Captain Arthur Stanley Wilson (1868–1938), who was the Conservative MP for Holderness. The latter married Alice Cecile Agnes Filmer and was succeeded in turn by his son Arthur Thomas Wilson, who adopted the additional surname of Filmer.

Hull High School for Girls moved to Tranby Croft after the Second World War and Hull Grammar School moved to Tranby Croft from its Cottingham site in 2005. The two schools merged into Hull Collegiate School, which in 2021 was renamed Tranby.[4]

References

  1. ^ Historic England. "Tranby Croft (1103387)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
  2. ^ "Tranby Croft, Anlaby with Anlaby Common". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  3. ^ Moonraker (Pan editions), p. 24
  4. ^ "Hull Collegiate School:History of the School". Hull Collegiate School. Retrieved 16 March 2013.

53°44′24″N 0°26′54″W / 53.7400°N 0.4482°W / 53.7400; -0.4482