In 1820, S.E. Batten purchased the building for £5,125 (~£620,000 in 2024),[8] named it 'The Grove', and commissioned it as a boarding house for Harrow School.[9]
In 1830, following Batten's death, Benjamin Hall Kennedy, English scholar and schoolmaster, became housemaster.[1]
In 1833, the house experienced a fire, and most of the house burned down, leaving only the front facade and a few cellars. The house was rebuilt in 1836.[1][10]
Rev. T.H. Steel was the longest-serving housemaster of the Grove, serving 37 years from 1836 to 1881.[11]
Edward Ernest Bowen, founding member of the Football Association became housemaster in 1881 and purchased the house from the Batten family for fourteen thousand pounds.[9] Bowen refurbished the house, establishing single rooms for almost all boys resident in the manor, making the Grove the first house in Harrow to have single rooms.[4]
Following Bowen's death in 1901, the house was bequeathed to Harrow School.[1]
In 1915, boys from another boarding house of Harrow School, the Church Hill House, moved to The Grove, combining them.[1]
In 1974, another fire broke out on the top floor of the building, lit by a pupil who had obtained gasoline and set it on fire. £100,000 of damage was caused.[12]
In September 2016, the Grove started a refurbishment campaign that added new common rooms, a new entrance, new accommodation for the assistant housemaster and matron, as well as a new tutors' room for one-to-one support.[13] It was completed in 2020, in time for The Grove's 200th anniversary as a boarding house.
The house celebrated its 200th anniversary as a boarding house in 2020.
Boarding House
The Grove is one of Harrow School's 12 boarding houses. It houses around 70 boys. The current housemaster is Alastair Cook, the deputy housemaster is R. R. McMahon, and the Matron is Maxine Sears. The Grove's House colours are currently red and blue.[1]