Lanhydrock House

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Lanhydrock House
Lanhydrock 04.jpg
Location Lanhydrock, Cornwall, England
Coordinates 50°26′28″N4°41′53″W / 50.441°N 4.698°W / 50.441; -4.698
Built1881–1882
Architect Sir George Gilbert Scott
Owner National Trust
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameLanhydrock House
Designated25 October 1951
Reference no. 1157870
Official nameLanhydrock
Designated11 June 1987
Reference no. 1000449
Cornwall UK location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location of Lanhydrock House in Cornwall

Lanhydrock House, commonly known simply as Lanhydrock, is a country house and estate in the parish of Lanhydrock, Cornwall, UK.

Contents

The great house stands in extensive grounds (360 hectares or 890 acres) above the River Fowey and it has been owned and managed by the National Trust since 1953. [1] Much of the present house dates back to Victorian times but some sections date from the 1620s. It is a Grade I listed building [2] and is set in gardens with formal areas. The hill behind the house is planted with a fine selection of shrubs and trees. [3]

The parish church is dedicated to St Hydroc and stands in the grounds of Lanhydrock House. Parts date back to the late 15th century and the church has a chancel, nave, north and south aisles and three-stage battlemented tower with nine bells. Eight bells date from the late 19th century and are regularly rung. The ninth bell dates from circa 1599 and is only rung infrequently for tolling. [4]

Lanhydrock Church Lanhydrock House.jpg
Lanhydrock Church
The gatehouse Lanhydrock House Gatehouse.jpg
The gatehouse
Lanhydrock House Gallery Lanhydrock Galerie 2010.jpg
Lanhydrock House Gallery
A corridor within the property Lanhydrock corridor.jpg
A corridor within the property
Lanhydrock House - Billiard Room 2014 Lanhydrock House Billardzimmer 2014.jpg
Lanhydrock House – Billiard Room 2014

Early history

Lanhydrock estate belonged to the Augustinian priory of St Petroc at Bodmin but the Dissolution of the Monasteries during the 1530s saw it pass into private hands. In 1620 wealthy merchant Sir Richard Robartes, of Truro, acquired the estate and began building Lanhydrock House, designed to a four-sided layout around a central courtyard and constructed of grey granite. Robartes died in 1624 but work on the building was continued by his son John Robartes, 1st Earl of Radnor, a notable public figure who served as Lord Privy Seal and Lord President of the Council. The embattled walls were built of rude (rough), massive granite blocks with years 1636 and 1642 on the walls, indicating when they were built. A barbican gate was added and the house was garrisoned by Parliamentary forces in August 1644 when Sir Richard Grenville took possession. [5]

Agar-Robartes

Most of the current building dates from late Victorian times, when the estate came under the ownership of the Agar-Robartes family.

Henry Robartes, 3rd Earl of Radnor (c. 1695–1741), was succeeded as Earl of Radnor by a cousin, but decided to separate the estate from the peerages by leaving it to a son of his sister Mary. By the late 18th century it had passed to Anna Maria Hunt (1771–1861) of Mayfair, London, the great-niece of the third Earl. In 1804 she married Charles Bagenal Agar, the youngest son of Irish peer James Agar, 1st Viscount Clifden. The couple had three children, but by 1818 not only had her husband died, but also her eldest and youngest sons. Resultantly, over the next fifty years of widowhood, although mainly an absentee landlord – she preferred the social life of London – she was known to be a conscientious, benevolent, and charitable landlord and employer, who greatly improved the estate. On the death of his mother in 1822, her surviving middle son Thomas Agar took up residence at Lanhydrock and adopted the Robartes name by royal warrant. Agar-Robartes was returned to Parliament for Cornwall East in 1847, a seat he held until 1868. In 1869 the barony of Robartes held by his mother's ancestors was revived when he was raised to the peerage as Baron Robartes of Lanhydrock and of Truro in the County of Cornwall. By 1872 Lord Robartes of Lanhydrock was listed among the top ten landowners in Cornwall, with estates of 22,234 acres (89.98 km2) or 2.93% of Cornwall. [6]

Agar-Robartes had the east wing of the house demolished, leaving the U-shaped plan seen today. In 1880 he commissioned the architect George Gilbert Scott to renovate Lanhydrock House. On 4 April 1881 a major fire destroyed the south wing and caused extensive damage to the central section. The fire started in the kitchen, and a near gale-force wind fanned the flames along the south wing and the ″communicating block″. [5] Of the main house only the north wing, with its 116 feet (35 m) Long Gallery, and the front porch building survived intact, along with the original gatehouse, which dates from the mid-17th century. The gallery was decorated with old plaster work which was considered to be the finest of its type in the west of England with figures representing the creation in ″bas-relief″. The property was insured for £10,000 in the Royal Standard Office and for £10,000 in the County Fire Office, and the damage is estimated to have cost £8,000 to £10,000 [5] It was reported in August 1881 that the rebuilding of the house would cost £50,000 and was to be undertaken by Messers Lang and Son of Liskeard. [7] New sections were built behind the south wing, including a kitchen block, in the style of the original building – which was unusual at the time. Agar-Robartes’s wife died five days after the fire of smoke inhalation, and he died twelve months later, reported to be of a broken heart. [8]

Their only son, Thomas Charles Agar-Robartes, inherited the estate. Having been called to the Bar in 1870, in 1880 Agar-Robartes was returned to Parliament as one of two representatives for Cornwall East. He appointed a local architect, Richard Coad – who had worked as an assistant to George Gilbert Scott – to design and supervise the construction of a high-Victorian house from the previous adaptions of the Jacobean house his father had planned. After renovations on the house were completed, Agar-Robartes moved his family there about 1885. Agar-Robartes entered the House of Lords on the death of his father in 1882, [9] and on 10 September 1899 succeeded his kinsman as Viscount Clifden. In 1891, as chairman of the Agar-Robartes Bank, he took over the ownership of Wimpole Hall, the largest house in Cambridgeshire. Moving his family home there, he later served as Lord-Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire from 1906 to 1915.

The Robartes family suffered great losses during the First World War, including the heir Thomas Agar-Robartes, who was killed during the Battle of Loos in France, while trying to rescue a colleague from no-man's land. [10] [11] As Agar-Robartes was unmarried, his younger brother Francis later succeeded their father.

Antiquities

The cross in the churchyard Ancient cross - St Hydroc's Church - geograph.org.uk - 1351273.jpg
The cross in the churchyard

Arthur Langdon (1896) recorded two Cornish crosses and two cross bases (at Tredinnick Cross and Reperry) [12] in the parish. One cross is in the churchyard and the other is half a cross head at Treffry. The cross in the churchyard is ornamented on all four sides of the shaft. [13] In addition to these there is a cross called Bodwen Cross; this cross was recorded in 1850 but was not mentioned by J. T. Blight or Arthur Langdon. It was found again in 1937 near Helman Tor in the parish of Lanlivery. It was taken from there and erected in the new cemetery at Lanhydrock. A request for it to be returned to Lanlivery to a site on the Saints' Way was refused. [14]

Lanhydrock Estate Company

In 1934, to manage income taxes and death duties, the entire Cornish landholdings of the Agar-Robartes family were incorporated into the Lanhydrock Estate Company. In 1953, faced with crippling death duties through a lack of his own children, the 7th Viscount Clifden gave the house and approximately 160 hectares (400 acres) of parkland to the National Trust. This allowed the preservation of the house and its extensive Victorian collections, and, by agreement with HM Revenue, payment in kind of death duties, allowing the residual Lanhydrock Estate Company to pass into the hands of the wider family.

On the death of the 7th Viscount, the titles and control of the company passed to his youngest brother Arthur Agar-Robartes, 8th Viscount Clifden. Lord Clifden died in December 1974, and in a similar death duty exchange with HM Revenue, added 298 acres during the 1970s to the National Trust's estate holdings. [15] He had married Patience Mary Basset in 1920 but died without male issue, and upon his death all his titles, with the exception of the barony of Mendip (which the 6th Earl of Normanton succeeded) became extinct. His daughter Rachel married Captain Cromwell Lloyd-Davies RN, DSO DSC in 1941, and they had a daughter Ann Lloyd-Davies (1942–present). In 1964 she married Colin Williams; they and their three children now control the company. [16]

As of 2020 the company owns and controls 2,500 acres of land, and is by descent controlled by the Williams family.

House and gardens today

Today, the public tour of Lanhydrock house is one of the longest of any National Trust house. It takes in the service rooms, nurseries and some servants' bedrooms, as well as the main reception rooms and family bedrooms. In 2004 it was one of the Trust's ten most visited paid-entry properties, with over 200,000 visitors.

Parts of the estate have been designated as an Important Plant Area, by the organisation Plantlife, for its ancient woodland and lichens. [17]

Lanhydrock was the main setting for a 1996 film version of Twelfth Night directed by Trevor Nunn, and starring Helena Bonham Carter as Olivia. On 12 June 2008 Lanhydrock hosted an episode of BBC TV's Antiques Roadshow , which was first aired on 12 October 2008 (part 1) and 30 November 2008 (part 2).

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References

  1. National Trust website: Lanhydrock Archived 30 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine ; retrieved May 2010
  2. Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1157870)". National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 22 April 2007.
  3. "Lanhydrock". National Trust.
  4. "Dove Details". dove.cccbr.org.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 "Great Fire at Lanhydrock House, The Seat of Lord Robartes". The Cornishman. No. 143. 7 April 1881. p. 5.
  6. Who Owns Britain – by Kevin Cahill (author)
  7. "Local News". The Cornishman. No. 162. 18 August 1881. p. 6.
  8. "Salvation and tragedy: 1798–1881". National Trust. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  9. Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs – Constituencies beginning with "C" (part 6)
  10. "House of Commons War Memorial: Final Volumes Unveiled by The Speaker". The Times. No. 46050. London. 6 February 1932. p. 7.
  11. Moss-Blundell, Edward Whitaker, ed. (1931). The House of Commons Book of Remembrance 1914–1918. E. Mathews & Marrot.
  12. For more details of Reperry Cross, see Lanivet
  13. Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses. Truro: Joseph Pollard; pp. 382–83, 183, 227 & 423
  14. Langdon, A. G. (2002) Stone Crosses in Mid Cornwall; 2nd ed. Federation of Old Cornwall Societies; p. 42
  15. "Lanhydrock in the 20th century". National Trust. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  16. "Family Tree - the Cobbold Family History Trust".
  17. "Lanhydrock Park". Plantlife. Archived from the original on 1 July 2012. Retrieved 7 February 2012.