Snaresbrook Crown Court is a historic, grade II listed building situated in Snaresbrook, an area within the London Borough of Redbridge. It is one of 12 Crown Courts serving Greater London and is designated as a third-tier court. It is set within 18 acres of grounds and has its own lake, known as Eagle Pond. It operates 20 court rooms and manages 7,000 cases a year, making it the largest Crown Court in the United Kingdom. In 2014 the court saw 4,400 cases brought to trial.
Construction of the building started in 1841 and finished two years later. It was built to a design by the architects George Gilbert Scott and William Bonython Moffatt, the designers of many notable buildings including St Pancras railway station in London. Snaresbrook Crown Court was originally built as an orphanage at the behest of the philanthropist Andrew Reed who named it the Infant Orphanage Asylum; later it became the Royal National Children's Foundation. Under various titles, it remained an orphanage until 1938 when it became the Royal Wanstead School. The building continued as a school until 1971, although plans were in place by the mid-1960s for it to become a court.
Snaresbrook Crown Court opened on 26 November 1974. The latest building to be added was the outer annex in 1988 at a cost of £3m. The court is located on Hollybush Hill, and is opposite the junction to High Street, Wanstead. The nearest tube station is Snaresbrook on the Central line.
The Wanstead Infant Orphan Asylum was founded by the philanthropist Andrew Reed in 1827 and was based in Hackney. In the 1830s, and owing to a lack of space in the current building, Reed applied to the Crown Estate for a section of land in Snaresbrook, which was then part of Wanstead Forest, and a grant to help fund the building of a new premises. The application was successful and construction started on 27 June 1841. Set to a design by the architects George Gilbert Scott and William Bonython Moffatt, the foundation stone was laid by Albert, Prince Consort.
The Infant Orphanage Asylum was officially opened on 27 June 1843 by Leopold I of Belgium. The building's design was Elizabethan in style, and it cost £35,000 to construct. The 1881 census recorded there being 74 staff and over 400 children at the institution. King George V, who was the patron of Reed's charity, renamed the asylum "Royal Infant Orphanage" in 1919. For children to be admitted, they had be fatherless or entirely orphaned; under the age of 7; and their late fathers would have to have been considered by the trustees to be either "creditable" (not earning less than £50 a year upon their death), "respectable" (£100 a year), or "very respectable" (£400 a year). In exceptional circumstances, the institution accepted children whose fathers were still alive but "subject to confirmed lunacy or paralysis", according to a reporter for the Derbyshire Courier. Once admitted the institution would house and look after the children up to the age of 15. The youngest recorded child to reside at the orphanage was a six-month-old girl in 1849.
In 1938 the building became the "Royal Wanstead School" and Prince George, Duke of Kent became its patron. As well as a refuge for orphans, it was also allowing children from impoverished families to join its register. These inductions were brief and stopped altogether in 1942 owing to the inroduction of the welfare state, which allowed poor families to live together. The school received grammar school status in the years after the establishment of the Education Act in 1944 and was funded by the Local Education Authority. By the late 1960s the school was experiencing a decline in pupil admissions which resulted in financial difficulties. It eventually closed in 1971. The children's charity exists today under the name of the Royal National Children's Foundation. On Christmas Day of that year the building came into the ownership of the Department of the Environment who began a £1.6m refurbishment project, creating what is evident today. The building's chapel and North Wing are the only two areas to remain in their original states.
With the school winding down by the mid 1960s, work began on converting certain sections of the building into a court. It opened, as such, on 1 April 1965 when the first case was heard. The building had one judge and a group of 12 staff who managed 325 cases within the first year. The building received grade II listed status on 11 November 1968. Snaresbrook Crown Court was officially opened on 26 November 1974 by Lord Widgery, who was at that time Lord Chief Justice. Further improvements were made to the site between 1976 and 1979, but in November 1981 a large fire destroyed three of the courtrooms and damaged two others. Renovations were made, and by 1988, five more court rooms, including a new annex, had been added at a cost of £3m. Today, the building has 20 courtrooms in total which, in 2014 alone, had heard 4,400 cases.
Scott was apprenticed to a London architect and designed the first of his many churches in 1838; but his real artistic education dates from his study of A.W.N. Pugin’s works on medieval architecture. The first result of this study was his design for the Martyrs’ Memorial (1841) at Oxford. Scott won the competition for the Nikolai Church (1845–63) in Hamburg, Germany, with a design in 14th-century German Gothic. This commission launched his career and earned him an international reputation. Among his best-known works are the Albert Memorial (1863–72) and the Midland Grand Hotel (built c. 1872; later called St. Pancras Hotel) attached to St. Pancras Station, both in London. Scott’s significance rests partly on the sheer number of important buildings with which he was associated. Among the approximately 850 structures that he designed, restored, or otherwise influenced are almost 500 churches, 39 cathedrals and minsters, and many buildings for colleges and universities. Because he was the organizer and director of the largest English architectural firm of the period, Scott’s own individual designs are difficult to determine.
The restoration of long-neglected medieval cathedrals and abbeys, which was one aspect of the Gothic Revival, was a controversial issue even in the 19th century; and Scott’s restoration of such famous monuments as Ely, Salisbury, and Lichfield cathedrals, as well as Westminster Abbey, has been regarded with mixed feelings by subsequent generations. Scott was knighted in 1872.
Scott communicated his love of medieval architecture in his lively and opinionated writings. These include Remarks on Secular and Domestic Architecture, Present and Future (1857, 2nd ed. 1858), and Gleanings from Westminster Abbey (1861, 2nd ed. 1863). George Gilbert Scott, Jr., published his father’s Personal and Professional Recollections (1879), which has been reissued in facsimile with previously omitted material and a critical introduction by Gavin Stamp (1995).