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Aileen Lutyens

  • David Young
  • 1 day ago
  • 2 min read

Miss Aileen Lutyens, Edwin's sister, with her pony and dog. She always wore purple tweed according to Mary Bennett. She ran a boys' club as she felt they needed purpose. She was also the choir mistress. Mrs Fisher also started a choir and Miss Lutyens "contributed a penetrating alto". The choir won a certificate at the Dorking Festival.



Aileen Lutyens (c. late 1800s – 1926) was a member of the prominent Lutyens family who became a well-known and active figure in the village of Thursley during the early decades of the twentieth century. She was one of the daughters of Captain Charles Augustus Henry Lutyens, a soldier-turned-painter, and Mary Theresa Gallwey, and the younger sister of the celebrated architect Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens. The family lived at a large country house in Thursley known in its later years as Street House (then “The Cottage”), and Aileen remained there long after her parents’ deaths.


In the 1920s, Aileen was remembered by villagers as a brisk, capable and benevolent presence in the community, someone who “dominated the Thursley scene.” She was deeply involved in local social life: helping to establish the fledgling choral society, contributing her rich alto voice, and playing a key role in securing Thursley’s first Village Hall — a large army hut that became the focus for social gatherings for decades. She was also a founder member of the local Women’s Institute, and took a keen interest in fostering activities that would occupy and guide the village’s youth. One of her own initiatives, remembered fondly by residents, was running a kind of social club aimed at keeping young boys constructively engaged and away from aimless drifting.


Aileen’s influence extended beyond social clubs and cultural activities — she typified the spirit of village leadership in that era. She was regarded as someone who helped knit the community together through support for local institutions and events, and through her personal engagement in Thursley’s civic and social life. Aileen Lutyens died in 1926, and her death marked the end of an era in which members of the Lutyens family had been central figures in the village’s life.


She is buried in the churchyard of St Michael's & All Angels, where there is a stone cross designed by her brother, Sir Edwin Lutyens, bearing the names of their parents Charles and Mary Lutyens and his sister Aileen Lutyens.


 

 


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