Described by connoisseurs as an unforgettable experience,Southside House provides an enchantingly eccentric backdrop to the lives and loves of generations of the Pennington Mellor Munthe families. Maintained in traditional style without intrusive refurbishment
and crowded with family possessions of centuries, Southside offers a wealth of fascinating family stories.

Southside has associations with Queen Natalie of Serbia and her son Alexander, and the family also have mementos from the Duke of Wharton, Lady Hamilton and others.

Southside was re-built in the William and Mary style, and behind the long façade are the old rooms, still with much of the furniture which the Penningtons brought here, and a superb collection of art and historical objects reflecting centuries of ownership.

John Pennington’s great granddaughter Hilda, married Axel Munthe, the charismatic Swedish doctor whose most famous book,The Story of St Michele, briefly outsold the bible and remains amongst the ten best sellers of the 20th century.

The preservation of the house was left to Hilda Pennington Munthe and her youngest
son, Malcom, who led a life of extraordinary adventure during the Second World War. A member of the S.O.E, Major Munthe worked behind enemy lines in Nazi-occupied Scandinavia, and took part in the Allied landings at Anzio. Suffering from war wounds, the reclusive Major eventually retreated to the safe haven of Southside, which he painstakingly restored and transformed into a stage on which his perceptions of family history were presented.

He devoted the same energy to preserving Hellens, the family´s country home in Herefordshire, also open to the public: www.hellensmanor.co.uk

Visit by HRH the Duke of Gloucester to Southside House
Malcolm Munthe’s surviving children continue to cherish Southside House and Hellens through the Pennington-Mellor-Munthe Charity Trust. Both houses serve their communities, with concerts, lectures, educational activities, workshops and literary evenings, as well as guided tours.

The experiences offered by this magical house and gardens can inspire the unusual, adventurous and unexpected. Sixth form A level art students use the house as a creative resource, as have groups from the Battersea Arts Centre and Wimbledon Colle of Art.

Children from primary schools experience domestic history in the context of a lived-in family home
: Merton Young carers come for an annual Christmas party, as well as summer holiday workshops, and young musicians attend masterclasses, workshops, and give recitals here. Local chamber music groups also perform at the house, and our atmospheric music room is the setting for a wide variety of events in the Wimbledon BookFest and the newly established Wimbledon Music Festival.
As well as the general and on-going work of conserving and caring for the delicate and fragile environment of Southside House, we have a group of ladies from the National Association of Decorative and Fine Arts Societies (NADFAS) who dedicate Monday mornings to work on recording, cataloguing and conserving a hitherto undiscovered collection of Worth gowns and other items of clothing. We are extremely grateful for
their efforts, and to NADFAS and the Pennington Mellor Munthe Charity Trust for the grants that they have made available to assist with this work.
The NADFAS group working on one of the Worth costumes
The Music Room, with the newly
restored Playel concert grand piano
The Library, virtually unchanged from
when Major Malcom Munthe lived here
Archway to the Tapestry Room
The bronze Marot chandelier in the Dining Room
Elizabeth Howerd, Countess of Peterborough by Theodore Rouselle