Harry Hallowes (born
c. 1936, died 2016), also known as Harry the Hermit, was an Irishman who became famous for living in a camp on
Hampstead Heath in north London. When property developers tried to evict him, he successfully claimed
adverse possession. After his death, a
romantic comedy called Hampstead was made about his life.
Life
Hallowes was born in
County Sligo, Ireland, around 1936 and moved to London in the 1950s.[1] He was evicted from his
council flat in
Highgate in 1987 and then set up a makeshift camp in a corner of Hampstead Heath near
Athlone House, supporting himself by doing odd jobs for locals such as the director
Terry Gilliam.[2][3] When property developers tried to evict him, he successfully claimed title to the land by
adverse possession having lived there for over 12 years.[4] He was awarded title to the half-acre plot of land in 2007.[5]
Death
Hallowes died in February 2016.[6] Hallowes left the half-acre plot to two homelessness charities (
Shelter and
Centrepoint) and following his death the land was auctioned.[7][5] The plot sold for £154,000 which was significantly less than estimates that had been speculatively reported in the press. This was due to an agreement that is over 100 years old which prevents construction on the site.[5]