She was the author of Lost London (1971), in whose introduction she wrote:[1]
London is threatened with the grim prospect of a Manhattan-like future, becoming a city of the very rich and the very poor, a city unattainable and increasingly unattractive to the middle classes and to the younger families with children to bring up…
— Hermione Hobhouse, Lost London
Between 1973 and 1978 she gave lectures in architectural history at the Architectural Association as well as in the United States into the 1980s.[1][3] In 1976 Hobhouse succeeded Jane Fawcett as secretary of the Victorian Society, a group that campaigns to conserve Victorian and Edwardian buildings.[1] A later chair, Peter Howell, said of her in this period:[3]
Her academic credentials, and her networking skills (she was never one to miss a party), helped raise the Society's profile.
— Peter Howell
Her assistant at the Victorian Society, Louise Nicholson, recalled:[3]
On Mondays, she would often arrive at the Vic Soc's offices [in Bedford Park] direct from Somerset, wearing Wellington boots and carrying wicker baskets of home-grown fruit and vegetables. When we joint-hosted Vic Soc dinners, her unlikely skill was to skin, carve and bone out a large chicken, then put the flesh together inside its skin, a party piece to make any Edwardian celebrity chef proud.
— Louise Nicholson
It was a post she held until leaving in 1983 to work as general editor of the Survey of London.[1] During her tenure she oversaw publication of survey volumes on part of Kensington and the challenging prospect of covering the Docklands area of East London at a time when it was dramatically changing and developing. She also edited a monograph for the survey on the former GLCCounty Hall.
Honours and external interests
In 1981 Hobhouse was appointed MBE. She was also made a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, where she served as a council member between 1984 and 1987.[1][3] She served on the council of the National Trust (1983–2001) and of the Royal Albert Hall (1988–2004). In the late 20th century the Royal Albert Hall underwent a five-year programme of refurbishment, and she was reported as having supervised the reinstatement of stencilling in the public areas.[4] She supported the Clapham Society and the Somerset Buildings Preservation Trust.[1][3]
When the Reform Club allowed female members for the first time Hobhouse was one of the first to join. She was a keen supporter of the campaign to restore the club's home in Pall Mall, an Italianate palazzo by Charles Barry.[1]
Hobhouse married architect Harry Graham in 1958. The marriage produced two children – a son, Francis, and daughter, Harriet – before being amicably dissolved.[1] Hobhouse was survived by her children.
Partial bibliography
The Ward of Cheap in the City of London: A Short History (1959)
Lost London: A Century of Demolition and Decay (1971)
Thomas Cubitt: Master Builder (1971, revised 1995)
A History of Regent Street (1975)
Oxford and Cambridge with Richard Gloucester (1980)
Prince Albert: His Life and Work (1983)
Survey of London Volume XLII: Southern Kensington: Kensington Square to Earl's Court (as editor) (1986)
Good and Proper Materials: Fabric of London Since the Great Fire with Ann Saunders (1989)
County Hall: Survey Of London Monograph 17 (as editor) (1991)
Survey of London Volumes XLIII and XLIV: Poplar, Blackwall and the Isle of Dogs (as editor) (1994)
London Survey'd: The Work Of The Survey Of London 1894–1994 (1994)
Crystal Palace and the Great Exhibition: Science, Art, and Productive Industry: The History of the Royal Commission of the Exhibition of 1851 (2002)