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Charles Layard who lived in
      Bagatelle House (now Alfred House) fathered......wait for it,.......26
      children!!! 
  
  
  
Thurstan Road & Cambridge Place Area  
       
      Fifty years ago, the Thurstan Road- Cambridge
      Place thoroughfare was one of the most picturesque in Colombo. 
It was lined on either side with
      gigantic specimens of the flamboyant or flame of the forest tree
      (poinciana regia) and the saman tree (samanea saman), which provided a
      shady and restful canopy over the road. 
During the months of April and May
      when the avenue of trees was in full bloom, this stretch of road was most
      colourful and attractive and indeed a magnificent spectacle, a remarkable
      living legacy from the spacious days of the past. 
Those were the days when Colombo
      was renowned the world over as the "garden city of the east". 
       
      It is believed that the trees were planted
      around 1920 following a report by Professor Patrick Geddes who was
      commissioned by the government of the day to recommend a master plan for
      the development of Colombo. 
He had a vision for Colombo, which
      included trees, greenery, and open spaces. 
  
  
Sometime in the nineteen forties members of the
      Orchid Circle of Ceylon took the initiative of adding further colour to
      the environment provided by the trees, by planting varieties of epiphytic
      orchids on the branches of the larger trees. 
Specimens of cymnbidum bicolor,
      vanda tesselatta, and dendrobiun superbiens could to this day be seen
      among the trees that survive along this once beautiful avenue. 
       
      Thurstan Road (since renamed Munidasa
      Cumaranatunge Mawata, after the well known
      Sinhalese author and poet) commences at its intersection with Reid Avenue,
      and ends at the roundabout connecting Flower Road. 
Cambridge Place continues
      northwards from this point, and ends at its intersection with Edinburgh
      Crescent, now known as Sir Marcus Fernando Mawata. 
  
  
Thurstan Road was once the eastern
      boundary of the estate originally known as Bagatelle, and renamed later
      as Alfred House. 
       
      The Fergusons Directory of 1871 lists Bagatelle as a cinnamon cum coconut
      estate of 125 acres. 
  
  
As the history of Alfred House has
      a significant bearing on the stately homes that exist on Thurstan Road to
      this day, a brief examination of its past would seem appropriate. 
       
      The property was first advertised for sale in the Ceylon Government
      Gazette of March 9 1822 as" a thatched cottage with a tent roof,
      about two miles and half from the Fort of Colombo, to be disposed of by
      private contract." 
The owner at the time was believed
      to be a prominent businessman in the Fort with the quaint name Daddy
      Parsee. 
  
  
Charles Edward Layard the third
      son of the Dean of Bristol arrived in Ceylon in 1803. 
He joined the Ceylon Civil Service
      in 1804 and served until 1839. 
It is not clear whether he owned
      Bagatelle Estate, but it is evident that he resided there, the thatched
      cottage having been replaced by a substantial two-storied bungalow at the
      time of his occupation. 
       
      Many of Layard's children were born in Bagatelle House, and it is on record that the
      youngest of Layard's 26 children, named Barbara, was born in Bagatelle in
      1834. 
       
      The Ceylon Almanacs of the 1840s lists Bagatelle Estate as a property
      owned by Arbuthnot and Co, who were agents for the Government of
      Ceylon in India, and who were the sole exporters of cinnamon from Ceylon,
      which was a government monopoly at the time. 
Around 1858 Susew de Soysa, a
      pioneer native plantation owner became the owner of Bagatelle Estate, which was thereafter called
      Bagatelle Walauwwa. 
His nephew Charles Henry de Soysa to whom the
      property passed on, demolished the old homestead and built a magnificent
      home comprising of around 100 rooms. This was the location of a historic
      dinner that was accorded by the De Soysas to the Duke of Edinburgh when
      he visited Ceylon in 1870. 
       
      The house was named Alfred House with the permission of Prince
      Alfred, the Duke. C.H. De Soysa died in 1890, and his wife in 1914,
      leaving a large family of 14 sons and daughters to inherit an enormous
      estate which in addition to Alfred House included several thousand acres
      of coconut, tea and rubber lands spread around the island. 
       
      Over the years, the 125 acre Alfred House Estate underwent several sub
      divisions, some major changes being precipitated by the master plan for
      Colombo which foresaw many new roads across the estate. 
The earlier sub divisions were
      however made by the De Soysa family itself, which constructed several
      stately mansions within the property. 
       
      The ornate Lakshmigiri which was built in 1910 by A..J.R.
      de Soysa, the second son of C.H. de Soysa, is a classic example of
      extravagant building design of the time. 
This house with its extensive
      gardens and massive cast iron gates is at the southern end of Thurstan
      Road bordering Queens Road. 
It bears assessment No.102 Thurstan
      Road and is much the same fifty years ago, as it was when constructed
      almost half a century earlier. 
A few years after it was built,
      the house was mortgaged, and later foreclosed. 
It was then bought by the Adamjee Lukmanjee
      family and has remained in their ownership to date under the name Saifee
      Villa. 
       
      Fifty years ago there were no buildings between Saifee Villa and Queens
      Road. 
  
Adjoining Queens Road is the house
      originally named Regina Walauwwa by its owner T. H.A. de Soysa, the
      4th son of C.H. de Soysa. 
It was named after his wife
      Regina, and was built in 1912. 
An imposing building with multiple
      roofs, turrets, and towers it was a palatial residence facing Thurstan
      Road. 
The owner was a keen turfite
      owning many horses, and with a penchant for heavy wagers. 
The story goes that whenever he
      won over Rs. 100, 000 at the races, he would hoist the family flag on the
      large flagstaff in front of the house to indicate to all and sundry that
      he had made a killing at the races. 
This ritual was locally referred
      to as "Lakseta kodiya" meaning "win a lakh of rupees and
      the flag goes up". 
Fortunes do however fluctuate, and by 1920 he was in financial
      difficulties and the house sold to the newly emerging University College. 
It was then renamed College House. 
The flagstaff or 'kodigaha'
      remains on the property to this day. 
       
      On the opposite side of Thurstan Road was the
      Univeristy of Ceylon buildings constructed in 1913 as the home of Royal
      College. 
The school occupied the premises till 1923 when
      it was acquired by the Ceylon University College. 
Royal College later moved to the
      new premises on Racecourse Avenue, where it functions to this day. 
       
      Next to College House is a property extending to over 3 acres,
      purchased from the De Soysa family in 1926 by the Imperial Bank of India. 
It was earlier used as the dairy
      for Alfred House. 
The Bank commissioned Walker and
      Sons to construct an impressive residence for its manager, and the house
      was named "Carlowrie". 
In the mid l950s it was acquired
      by the Government of India as the official residence for its High
      Commissioner, and has since been called "India House". 
Many distinguished visitors have
      been entertained here, including Prime Minister Nehru, and later his
      daughter Indira Gandhi who have planted trees in commemoration of their
      visits, in its spacious gardens. 
       
      Adjoining India House were two bungalows belonging to Brooke Bonds Ceylon
      Ltd, the tea company. 
Hammerfaest was at No 80 Thurstan
      Raod and was the residence of its Managaing Director H. Broome. 
       
      In the adjoining home lived his Deputy Roy Collins, and later S. E.
      Satarasinghe. 
At No. 76 was Chitrakala one time
      residence of Percy Gunasena of M.D. Gunasena and Co. whose mortgage on
      the property was foreclosed by the bank. 
       
      Next to the University property was Thurstan College established in
      1949 in the premises earlier used by the Government Training College,
      prior to its shift to Maharagama. 
Adjoining Thurstan College was
      Royal Primary School, whose Headmaster Major A.F. de Saa Bandaranaike
      resided in the official bungalow at No 13. 
Mr. J.C.A. Corea the Principal of
      Royal College occupied the adjoining bungalow. 
The buildings and grounds of Royal
      Primary School stood next. 
       
      Around fifty years ago the school
      was under the Headmastership of Mr.H.D. Sugathapala and Mr..H.P.
      Jayewardene under whose leadership the well facilitated school hall known
      as "Navarangahala" was built. 
It acquired a permanent place in
      the history of the island, when the constituent assembly convened to
      draft the 1972 Constitution, was held there. 
It was also the occasion for the
      change of name from Ceylon to Sri Lanka. 
       
      On the opposite side of Thurstan Road facing Thurstan College were the
      ends of Bagatelle Road and Alfred Place conjoining at the intersection
      with Thurstan Road. 
At this point along Thurstan Road
      were a few commercial buildings including a small restaurant known as
      "Villas" a haunt of generations of Royal College students who
      dropped in after school for a 'cuppa' often combined surreptitiously with
      a cigarette. 
Many were the abortive raids
      conducted by the college prefects in attempts to rein in the offending
      delinquents. 
       
      Next door was Thurstan Café run by Noel Perera. 
Further on towards Flower Road,
      near Pedris Road was the home of K.H.M. Fernando, who owned a successful
      motor spares shop in the Pettah. 
       
      Adjoining Pedris Road was the home of Mrs. A. Wijewardene. 
Her son, the entrepreneur Upali Wijewardene
      who disappeared tragically in his Learjet in 1982, built his house designed by Geoffrey Bawa in part
      of the land in the 1970s. 
Her sons-in-law Dr. Atttygalle and
      Prof Stanley Wijesundera the latter killed during the JVP insurgency of
      1989 also lived in houses within the same property. 
Adjoining was the entrance to 5th
      Lane, which was neighbouring the dental clinic of Dr. Ian de Silva. 
       
      Next-door was the home of the General Manager of the Shell Co P.D. Finn. 
The house there was built on a
      property, which was earlier known as "the Monastery" 
The roundabout here links Thurstan
      Road on the south, Cambridge Place on the north, Racecourse Avenue on the
      East, and Flower Road on the west. 
       
      Racecourse Avenue in its entirety on one side provided boundaries to
      Royal College and Royal Primary School. 
At its western end was the Orient Club founded in 1894, and at one time an exclusive
      social club for the elites of Colombo. 
Its tennis courts border the
      southern end of Cambridge Place, near the roundabout. 
On the opposite side of Cambridge
      Place at No. 32 was the home of Sherman de Silva, the proprietor of a
      well-known produce company of the time. 
       
      Adjoining was the large home earlier called Cambridge House and later
      renamed Florence House when Sir Wilfred de Soysa, the sixth son of C.H.
      de Soysa, occupied it. 
Sir Wifred's sons Bishop Harold,
      Terrence, Cecil, Ryle, Anura, and Lalith, all grew up in this home, and
      were later to acquit themselves with great credit in adult life, whether
      it be business, sports, or in the "service of the Lord". 
Ryle was for many years the
      opening batsman for the Ceylon Cricket team then known as "The All
      Ceylon Cricket Team". 
As a schoolboy at Royal College he
      was a member of the unbeaten Royal team that toured Australia in 1938. 
Florence House stood on a large
      extent of land. 
It was demolished in the 1950s to
      give way to a cluster of large bungalows and a new roadway named
      Cambridge Terrace. 
       
      Adjoining Florence House was Mackinnon House the official home of the
      Managing Director of Mackinnon Mackenzie and Co. the well known shipping
      agents. 
H.W. Tatham lived in this house
      situated in a large garden enclosed by a high wall. In the late 1/950s Mr
      George Chitty the very successful criminal lawyer purchased this house
      and named it Goodwood. 
A humanist and a lover of people
      and company, he was a man of varied interests, and was an expert on
      cameras and photography, music, art, forensic medicine, woodwork, and
      motorcars. 
He led the successful prosecution
      in the Bandaranaike Assassination Case, at the invitation of the Crown. 
As in all neighbourhoods, romance
      is always in the air, and it was no different in Thurstan Road. 
His son Ajit married Rapti, the
      daughter of Y.D. Gundevia the Indian High Commissioner who lived in India
      House on Thurstan Road, thus linking the two roads Thurstan and Cambridge
      by marriage! 
       
      Two doors next to Goodwood was "St Catherine" the home of
      C.H.Z. Fernando whose father C.M. Fernando was a son in law of C.H. de
      Soysa of Alfred House. 
D.J. Wimalasurendra who pioneered
      hydroelectric schemes in Ceylon earlier owned St Catherine's. 
At the end of Cambridge Place
      fronting Edinburgh Cresecent was "Lynwood" the home of Francis
      Amarasuriya a popular race horse owner of the time. 
His elder son Rukman ended his
      life tragically, at an early age, committing suicide in 1957 in Nuwara
      Eliya. 
Facing the Museum on the opposite
      side in Cambridge Place, in a house called "Brentham" lived
      Leslie de Saram the head of the legal firm F.J. and G de Saram. 
He sold the house to the
      Australian Government, which purchased it for its embassy. 
Leslie de Saram was a remarkable
      man known for his generosity and many acts of philanthropy. 
He was educated at Royal College,
      and Clifton College in England, but gifted Gurutalawa Farm of 35 acres of
      cultivated land, and buildings, to St Thomas College, which established a
      branch school there. 
  
  
He also gifted his unique
      collection of rare antiques to the University of Ceylon, when it established at Peradeniya,
      and was described as "the greatest benefactor and friend the Ceylon
      University ever had". 
After his retirement he settled
      all his affairs in Ceylon and migrated first to England and later to
      Australia where he lived in Canberra. 
Next to Brentham was
      "Oakleigh" the home of another legal luminary F.C. Rowan the
      senior Partner of Julius and Creasy. 
Rowan was the advisor and
      confidante to almost every leading mercantile firm in Colombo in the
      1950s. 
       
      Further down Cambridge Place at "The Eyds" lived Stanley de
      Saram the brother of Leslie, and no less remarkable. 
He was also a partner of the
      family firm of de Saram's but in 1946 relinquished it to take up a
      position as a Director of Leechman and Co, an Agency House, the first
      Ceylonese to be invited to the position. 
He later became the first
      Ceylonese Chairman of the firm. 
Stanley and his wife were well
      known personalities in the mercantile world of that era, and were
      renowned for their legendary hospitality. 
Stanley and his wife at "The
      Eyds' who became close friends of the De Sarams hosted Lady Churchill on
      a visit to Ceylon in 1953. 
Later, Sir Winston and Lady
      Churchill played host to the De Sarams when they were asked to dinner at
      their home in Chartwell. 
After Stanley's death in the
      1970s, "The Eyds' was demolished and several new homes have come up
      on its grounds. 
Somewhere between "The
      Eyds" and Oakholme stood a house called Gresham, which has since
      been altered structurally. 
At around this area in Cambridge
      Place, was the intersection with Edinburgh Crescent. 
       
      Further on, adjoining the Orient Club was the Women's International
      Club. 
The Thurstan Road /Cambridge Place
      belt still remains a salubrious area of Colombo, but its quiet and leafy
      environment may not be the same as it was fifty years ago, as the student
      population in the educational triangle, which it adjoins, has expanded
      dramatically, making the area a traffic controller's nightmare during
      school hours. 
Mercifully, the commercial sprawl
      that is evident in most areas of Colombo has spared its blight here, and
      Thurstan Road and Cambridge Place together with its immediate environs,
      are still an absolutely charming area within Colombo. 
       
      (The writer wishes to acknowledge assistance given by Vinodh
      Wickremeratne, a fellow "streetscape connoisseur" especially in
      verifying the location of properties some of which have long since gone
      to dust) 
- courtesy The Ceylankan
      (Australia) 
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