More than 125 years ago, architect and designer Alfred Powell built an unassuming cottage in the hills of Surrey. It has since become one of Britain’s most important surviving examples of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
Known as Long Copse, the Grade II-listed residence in Ewhurst was originally commissioned in 1899 as a four-room summer retreat for artist Olivia Mudie-Cooke. It was gradually expanded into a substantial country home, with each addition designed to look as though it…

