The genuine closeness and meeting of minds amongst the Cotswold School designers can be glimpsed best in correspondence from the 1980s between Nina Griggs and Max Burrough, an early researcher and writer on Gimson and the Barnsleys. Nina recalls how following Gimson’s death they visited Emily Gimson ‘whenever we could’, often for extended periods. She further recollects her husband staying with Norman Jewson and his wife Mary, Ernest Barnsley’s daughter. Norman Jewson, like Griggs, had an architectural background and was an eager apostle of Gimson and Barnsley. Moreover, they had a shared passion in the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, of which they were both members. Indeed, Griggs’s famous etching ‘Owlpen Manor’ depicts the house Jewson purchased in 1925 and restored, rescuing it from a tumbledown fate. He had to sell it the following year, having rescued it out of sheer generosity. In his dedication Griggs praises how his friend ‘saved this ancient house from ruin’, perhaps not unlike what Griggs was to do with the derelict barn which was to become New Dover’s House.
Griggs also befriended ceramicists Alfred and Louise Powell and the woodcarver William Simmonds and his wife Eve who had moved to the Cotswolds in 1919 and lived within walking distance of the Gimsons’ house. Nina in her letters to Burrough reminisces of Sunday afternoon strolls ‘down hill through a wood and meadow’ to have tea there, presumably whilst she was staying with Emily Gimson. Most thrilling however were the annual Christmas puppet parties, conducted in the barn which also served as William’s workshop. Nina gleefully remembers being ‘sat on chairs and cushions…all in darkness the curtains parted’ the performances revealing ‘a magic world of make believe come true.’