Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Stanwick Hall, Northamptonshire

18th-century building in England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stanwick Hall, Northamptonshiremap
Remove ads

52.3302°N 0.5702°W / 52.3302; -0.5702

Thumb
19th century postcard

Stanwick Hall is a largely Georgian grade II* listed building located in the western end of the village of Stanwick, in the North Northamptonshire district, in the ceremonial county of Northamptonshire, England.[1][2]

Remove ads

History

Summarize
Perspective

The house[3] was originally constructed in the C17,[4] possibly earlier. Evidence of this original building is scant but survives:

  • The cellars/basement predate the house constructed above, the south elevation of which features a pair of dateable C17 3 light stone mullion windows
  • This is corroborated by a C19 Victorian pencil sketch,[5] which not only records the extant mullion windows, but also a doorway of the same era accessing the cellar/basement midway between them. This doorway was subsequently blocked, with no external trace remaining for many years, before being reinstated in around 2010
  • A 1722 "notice to lett" for the original C17 house[6] (broadly similar to future adverts relating to letting or selling the Hall) offers few clues to the form of the original building, other than "four rooms on a floor", which interestingly, is carried over into the current building, described exactly as such in 1802[7], some 60 years post rebuild. This is most likely a coincidence, but may hint at extensive remodelling (where internal walls were possibly retained,) rather than full demolition and a complete 1740s basement-up new build.
  • The presence of full-height C17 panelling with frieze decorated with scrolls in the central first floor room [4] would also appear to be a significant, dateable remaining feature of the original house. However, as is explained below, the house suffered a major fire on 2 April 1931, with only the bare walls remaining.[8] Either the effects of the fire were exaggerated & the panelling is a remnant of the original house, or it was taken from another building and fitted during the rebuild following the fire, or even during the 1740s construction phase.

The Hall as it appears today was built in 1742-1743 for James Lambe (d.1761)[9][10] by William Smith (1705-1747) at a cost of £750 (about £150,000 in modern terms.[11])

William Smith was an acclaimed Architect and Builder and was the son of Francis Smith of Warwick. William Smith was involved as architect, builder or mason in many major projects, including the Radcliffe Camera, Catton Hall, Kirtlington Park, Thame Park and Stoneleigh Abbey, on which he worked with his father. Stoneleigh Abbey was immortalized by Jane Austen in her novel Mansfield Park, in which Stoneleigh Abbey becomes Sotherton Court.

After the death of James Lambe, Stanwick Hall was advertised as for sale on several occasions. The sale notice showed Stanwick Hall (a modern, stone-built capital mansion), a coach house, two dove houses, two barns, three 3-stall stables, two other stables with convenient outbuildings, a dog kennel and boiling house with constant running water. It included 30 acres of rich pasture in three closes (Nether Close, Dove House Close and Upper Close, called the Cherry Orchard). There were 15 acres at Stanwick Pastures, to the east of the village and a further 97 acres of arable, ley and pasture ground in the open fields around the village.[12]

At the time of its reconstruction, Stanwick Hall was immediately adjacent to what was then the main road into Stanwick from the west, running between the main house and outbuildings to the north. The tithe map of the 1840s [13] shows "New Road" (constructed in 1821 to link a new coal wharf on the river Nene to Stanwick)[14] forming the northern edge of Nether Close, which became the new route of the main road into village from the west.


In 1931, there was a major fire that started in one of the lower rooms. The owners escaped and no one was killed but the building was gutted. The building was placed on the English Heritage "At Risk" Register,[15] with fungus growing on damp walls, roof tiles broken and roof timbers in danger of collapsing at any moment.

The building was purchased in 2007. A major restoration project started by the new owners was the subject of a BBC Restoration Home programme in 2011.[16]

Remove ads

Occupants

  • 1722 An large unnamed Stanwick house whose description is very similar to how future 'to let' or 'for sale' advertisements describe what will become known as Stanwick Hall, advertised to let, by unknown owner. Enquires to Reverend Mr Morton of Stanwick, or Thomas Flawn, Attleborough.[17]
  • 1731 William Lambe the elder, attorney at law, recorded as resident of Stanwick, (although address at this time not recorded.) Born in Great Addington, son of Robert Lambe, & nephew of Rev. John Lambe, (Rector of St Laurence's Church, 1673-1717, last resident of Stanwick rectory, prior to its 1717 rebuild: The Old Rectory, Stanwick) William has his first Stanwick-born child, also William, baptised at Stanwick Church.
  • 1743 James Lambe. Born 1692 in Hackney Middlesex, son of James Lambe, haberdasher, James was one of the few individuals who made money from the South Sea Company's Africa-South America slave trading. Having rebuilt Stanwick Hall, through marriage to Esther Barker whose family bought Fairford Park in 1650, his main home became Fairford Park where he became Lord of the Manor
  • The relationship between James Lambe of Hackney/Fairford Park and the Northamptonshire Lambes remains unproven, and although unlikely, may be coincidental. However, one of the beneficiaries of James' will of 1761 is given as "...my couzin Robert Lambe..."[18] There are at least two Great Addington Robert Lambes alive at the time of James' death, but any relationship between them has yet to be established.
  • 1750 A Mr Lambe recorded as being the owner of a property with 33 windows (second only to the Rectory, with 43) on Stanwick window tax inventory of that year [19] This most likely refers to the newly remodelled Stanwick Hall, which would have been one of the biggest houses by far in the village at this time.
  • 1761 Death of James Lambe at Fairford Park. Despite numerous properties appearing in James' will,[20] none of it is recorded as being in Northamptonshire, suggesting James may have sold the Hall following its rebuild and his relocation to Fairford Park.
  • 1762 William Lambe, attorney, on Stanwick Militia list
  • 1767, 1st August, William Lambe the elder dies. Despite owning numerous properties in several Northamptonshire Parishes, his will [21] records nothing in Stanwick.
  • 1780, 31st March, William Lambe the younger dies. With no inherited property from his father being recorded as being in Stanwick, William must have either inherited it from elsewhere, or purchased the Hall, Ivy cottage and associated land. He leaves his real estate, including that in Stanwick to "...my half-brother Samuel Ward Lambe..." [22]
  • 1781 Ward Lambe, farmer, on Stanwick Militia list
  • 1788 Samuel Ward Lambe dies. Samuel would appear to be the last Lambe to be resident of the Hall, although it appears to still be in Lambe ownership until at least 1792 - see 'to let' advertisement of 1792 below)
  • 1791 Estate of 130 acres, including a house described as 'modern stone built capital mansion house' advertised to be sold on behalf of an unknown vendor. The Earl of Egmont.[12] John Perceval, 3rd Earl of Egmont, (the brother of Spencer Perceval, who remains the only Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to have been assassinated.) is shown as the then tenant.[23]
  • 1792 Stanwick Hall, described as 'capital stone built mansion house', along with 3 closes of 30 acres advertised to let by unknown vendor. Advertisement adjoins another to let notice for Great Addington Manor on behalf of Mary Lambe (heiress to her uncles' William the elder of Stanwick, and Rev. Robert Lambe of Great Addington estates) and husband William Zouch [24] which strongly suggests Mary also owned Stanwick Hall at this time [25]
  • 1795 Estate of around 37 acres, including the Hall, described as a 'modern, strong, stone-built capital mansion house' advertised for sale.[26]
  • 1801 George Gascoyne appears on the Land Tax register for Stanwick, owing around £40 for that year (second only to the Rev. Pearce, who owes around £73).[27] This confirms the period where ownership of the Hall, adjacent Hall farm and Ivy Cottage is transferred from the Lambes to the Gascoynes (/Gascoyens/Gascoignes)[28]
  • 1802 George Gascoyne Gent. of Little Addington advertises the Hall for rent [29] "...now in the occupation of the Rev. Mr Sherrard."
  • Following the Enclosure Acts, which came to Stanwick 1834-8,[30] George Gascoyen becomes one of the five major landowners in Stanwick.
  • 1841-61: censuses George Gascoyne (farmer) Frances and family, resident Stanwick Hall
  • 1863 Death of George Gascoyne. Contents of Hall auctioned, including “The genteel and excellent Drawing, Dining, Bedroom, Kitchen and other FURNITURE, BEDDING, CHINA, GLASS, EARTHENWARE, BOOKS, PIANO-FORTE…”[31]
  • 1865 Stanwick Hall to let "with or without a little grass land..." by George Goodhall Gascoyne[32]
  • 1870 Cecil Wetenhall resident, Stanwick Hall.[33]
  • 1871 census: Cecil Wetenhall (living off property dividends) and family resident at the Hall.
  • 1873 Start of the 1873-96 Great depression of British agriculture
  • 1881 census: Thomas Somes (farmer of 606 acres) & family resident at the Hall.
  • 1882: Thomas and James Somes.[34]
  • 1887 Michaelmas: Joseph Baxter takes on tenancy of Stanwick Hall and Hall farm. Owner of both (and Ivy cottage) confirmed as Robert Loyd-Lindsay, 1st Baron Wantage[35]
  • 1891-1911 censuses: William James Backwell (farm and cattle dealer Sarah Blackwell and family resident the Hall
  • 1915 Colonel Fawcett resident Stanwick Hall.[36]
  • 1918 Walter Denton, farmer, acquires Stanwick Hall, Hall farm, Ivy Cottage and two cottages [37]
  • 1921 census: William Blackwell (farmer) and son resident, the Hall. Elizabeth Blackwell (widow & mother of William) and daughter Annie resident Ivy Cottage.
  • 1936 Walter Denton sells Stanwick Hall and Hall farm, but retains Ivy cottage as his residence.[38] Ivy cottage now separated from Hall and Hall farm for the first time in generations
  • 1936 PH Lamb, Bedford, new owners of Stanwick Hall and Hall farm.
  • 1939 England and Wales register: Richard G Skinner (farmer) tenant of the Hall.
  • July 1977 Stanwick Hall and Hall farm auctioned for sale by PH Lamb of Bedford. Tenant Richard G Skinner retires from farming[39]
  • 2006–present: The Russell family.
Remove ads

Hall Farm

Summarize
Perspective

As the name suggests, Hall Farm has a long association with the adjoining Stanwick Hall.

History

Pre-Victorian farm

The current Victorian buildings replace a range of much earlier[40] buildings aligned north-south in plan,[41] and located closer to Ivy Cottage to the east.[42]

A 1780 Lambe-era newspaper advertisement to let[43] both the farm and Ivy Cottage gives a good description of the old farm:[44]

'A Capital FARM, To be LETT, AND Entered upon at Lady-Day next, (Old-Stile) at STANWICK, near Higham Ferrers, in the County of Northampton: "Confisting of...Out-Offices are comprifed of a Corn-Barn of five Bays, a Stable adjoining of two Bays, a Three-stall Stable, a Hog’s-Court, Cow-House, Calves-Pens, (the Whole replete with all neceffary Conveniences) a large Cherry-Orchard, feveral Home-Closes, with 196 computed Acres of Arable and Ley Ground, 91 Acres of Pafture (inclofed) 21 Acres of Meadow, Commons for 196 Sheep and 21 Cows. Enquire of Alderman Drake, in Leicefter. N.B. There are feveral ufeful Hovels on the Premifes to accommodate a Tenant with.'

In 1863, following the death of the tenant, George Gascoyen the younger, further details of the old farm are revealed in an advertisement for the dispersal sale of the farm's dead and livestock[45]

'COMPRISING 250 sheep, 40 head of Cattle, 10 Horses, store Hogs, pure-bred Berkshire Sows, four Waggons, six Carts, excellent Water-cart, Suffolk Drill, manure Drill, iron and wood ploughs, ridge Ditto, several sets of iron Harrows, iron and wood Rolls, eight horse Cribs, 12 sheep ditto, two dozen sheep Troughs, chaff-cutting Machine, with horse power [ horse engine ]: winnowing Machine, and general Barn Tackle, sack weighing Machines, two oil cake Crushers, bean Mill, horse Hoes, ladders, Hurdles, Sacks, Ropes, Forks, Rakes, corn Drags, 10 sets of horse Harness, plough Chains, Gears, and general implements.'

The sales particulars give an insight into a relatively large, prosperous post Enclosure act farm just prior to the industrial revolution, that was in the process of radically transforming agriculture in the same way it would transport and manufacturing. Having employed a horse engine to power the winnower, chaff-cutter and other small machines, the farm would have been considered reasonably modern in the 1840s, towards the end of George's fathers tenure. However, by 1863 it was already obsolete, and would be swept away with the building of the replacement farm.


Victorian model farm

The current buildings are not shown on any detailed maps up to and including the Stanwick Inclosure map of 1838, and first appear on the OS map of 1880, shown as a E-shaped, double courtyard plan, typical of many model farms of the area at this time:

'[They] were recommended from the mid-18th century and many are documented from this period, though no surviving examples can be dated before the 1790s. The earlier examples are courtyard or U-plan with the barn forming the central block and shelter sheds, stables and enclosed cow houses the two side wings. The fourth side was no more than a wall with a gateway, or contained further sheds or smaller buildings such as pigsties, or was distinguished by a house (usually looking away from the yard). From the 1820s and 1830s, extra yards made E or even double-E plans.' 'The ultimate examples of courtyard farmsteads are the planned and model farms of the late 18th and 19th-century estates, the ideas for which were widely disseminated in textbooks and journals (Wade Martins 2002) they are generally associated with holdings over 150 acres, and are far less likely than the other plan types to be associated with other loose scatters of buildings'[46][47]

The commonly held consensus in 20th century Stanwick was that Hall Farm was constructed as a model farm [48] by Lord Overstone, Samuel Jones-Loyd, 1st Baron Overstone in the 1860s. This has yet to be verified, as the earliest evidence found of his ownership of the farm and Hall is from 1887 [49] but he does appears to have links with the Manor of Stanwick as early as 1862[50].

On his death in 1883 most of his vast estate including Hall farm, Stanwick Hall and Ivy Cottage passed to his daughter Lady Wantage, Harriet Loyd-Lindsay, Baroness Wantage whose estate included numerous farms throughout Northamptonshire.

In 1908, she still owns Hall farm, and as a "...token of their great esteem and regard" her Northamptonshire farm tenants arranged a presentation of photographs of themselves for her, taken at their respective farms, including the tenant of Hall farm at this time, Thomas Blackwell [51].

Remove ads

Ivy Cottage

Summarize
Perspective

‘‘’Ivy Cottage is a largely C17 grade II listed building located towards the west end of the village of Stanwick, in the North Northamptonshire district.[52]

Alternative names

1853-1891 Stanwick Cottage,[53][54] 1861-1953 Ivy Cottage,[55][56][57] Dovehouse Close, 1954-1999[58][59][60] currently Dovecote House

History

As with Hall farm, Ivy Cottage shares much history with the Hall over several hundred years with for example, the extended farming families of both the Gascoynes and Blackwells occupying both houses simultaneously over many years.[61] However, whilst the Hall and estate were freehold,[62] Ivy Cottage and estate were a Copyhold property as late as 1891 [63] and as such, separately owned by the Lord of the Manor of Stanwick.

  • 1780 An advert to let Ivy Cottage (by an unknown owner), an "...exceeding good Farm-Houfe..." [64] gives a useful description of the house at the time: "...Cellars, a Hall, Parlour, Kitchen, Dairy, Brewhouse, two Pantries, fix Chambers and one Garret."

Occupants

  • 1841 census: Green Gascoyne (farmer) Mary and family resident, Ivy Cottage
  • 1851 census: Green Gascoyne (farmer of 220 acres employing 10 labourers) Mary and family resident, Ivy Cottage
  • 1853 Rev. John B Walcot, Baptist minister and family, including his 4th daughter Martha resident, Ivy Cottage.[65] Martha marries C Gamble of Derby (recorded as living in Ivy Cottage in 1865 - see below.) It is worth noting that George Gascoyne Snr, father of George jnr. was, like the Rev. Walcot, a fellow Baptist, having had the birth of his children, Ann and George, registered not at Little Addington church, but Silver Street Baptist Chapel Kettering. For a wealthy landowner of the time, this was most unusual.
  • 1861 census: George Goodhall Gascoyne (farmer of 300 acres, employing 12 men, 7 boys, 1 shepherd, letter of thrashy [sic] machines employing 4 men) Elen and family resident Ivy Cottage.
  • 1861 Melville's Trade directory: George Goodhall Gascoyne resident, Ivy Cottage
  • 1865 Mr C Gamble resident, Ivy Cottage.[66] Given Ivy Cottage is shown occupied by George Goodhall and Elen Gascoyne for both the 1861 and 1871 censuses, it is probable Mr Gamble and the rev. John B Walcot before him were lodging in Ivy cottage.
  • 1871 census: Elen Gascoyne (wife of George Goodhall Gascoyne - absent for census) and family resident at Ivy Cottage.
  • 1873 Start of the 1873-96 Great depression of British agriculture
  • 1878: George Goodhall Gascoyne declares bankruptcy and vacates Ivy Cottage and Hall farm.[67]
  • 1880 Mr RC Alston Esq. vacates Ivy Cottage[68] “For terms, apply to Mr Somes” This seems likely to be Rowland Crewe Alston JP MA [69] who otherwise lived 8 miles away at Odell Castle.
  • 1881 census: Frank Wright (retired wine merchant) and wife Matilda resident, Ivy Cottage.
  • 1887 Michaelmas: Owner of Ivy cottage (together with Hall and Hall farm) confirmed as Robert Loyd-Lindsay, 1st Baron Wantage[70]
  • 1891 census: Thomas (farmer) and Elizabeth Blackwell and family resident at 56 High St (presumed to be Ivy Cottage, which isn't named)
  • 1894 Joseph Baxter resident, Ivy Cottage [71]
  • Thomas Blackwell, (farmer) wife Elizabeth and family resident Ivy Cottage.
  • 1906 & 1910 Thomas Blackwell resident, Ivy Cottage [72]
  • 1911 census: Thomas Blackwell, (farmer) "...one of the best know agriculturalists in the north part of the county..."[73] wife Elizabeth and family resident, Ivy Cottage.
  • 1918: Walter Denton, farmer, acquires Stanwick Hall, Hall farm, Ivy Cottage and two cottages [74]
  • 1921 census: Elizabeth Blackwell (widow & mother of William) and daughter Annie resident Ivy Cottage.
  • 1924 Walter Denton resident, Ivy Cottage [75]
  • 1936 Walter Denton sells Stanwick Hall and Hall farm, but retains Ivy cottage as his residence.[76] Ivy cottage now separated from Hall and Hall farm for the first time in generations.
  • 1939 England and Wales register: Walter Denton (retired farmer) and Martha MA Denton resident, Ivy Cottage.
  • 1941 Walter Denton, retired farmer "...one of the four leading farmers in Northamptonshire in his day..." [77] resident at Ivy Cottage.
  • 1948 30th May, Death of Walter Denton[78]
  • 1953 Contents of Ivy Cottage auctioned[79]
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads