Woodhall Park | |
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General information | |
Architectural style | Palladian |
Town or city | Watton-at-Stone |
Country | England |
Listed Building – Grade I | |
Official name | Woodhall Park (Heath Mount School) |
Designated | 1952 |
Reference no. | 1031363 [1] |
Coordinates | 51°51′11″N0°05′23″W / 51.85293°N 0.08984°W |
Construction started | 1770s |
Completed | 1780s and later extensions |
Client | Thomas Rumbold |
Technical details | |
Structural system | brick; limited use of Coade stone and Portland stone |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Thomas Leverton |
Woodhall Park is a Grade I listed [1] country house near Watton-at-Stone, Hertfordshire, England. The 18th century neo-classical building is set in a walled park in the Beane valley. It has been the home of Heath Mount School since the 1930s.
Thomas Rumbold, who was later made a baronet, acquired the Woodhall estate using the fortune he had made in India. One of his partners at Chittagong, Harry Verelst helped with the financing. [2] The estate and its manor house were originally home to the Butler or Boteler family. [3]
The architect Thomas Leverton was commissioned by Rumbold to design a new house to replace the manor house on a nearby site. [3] Rumbold became Governor of Madras in 1778 and made arrangements for work to continue on the house in his absence, payments being made from his account at Goslings Bank. [4] Suffering from poor health, he returned to England in 1780. The East India Company, unhappy about the Second Anglo-Mysore War, dismissed him the following year. He continued to serve as a Member of Parliament until 1790.
When Rumbold died in 1791, he was according to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, insolvent. [5] Under the terms of his will, the property was sold to benefit the children of his second marriage. It was acquired by Paul Benfield, who extended the house. His architect is not known. [4] Benfield, who has been described as "perhaps the most notorious of the nabobs", [6] went bankrupt. The estate was bought by Samuel Smith in 1801.
Leverton's designs were exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1777. [4]
Describing Leverton's work at Woodhall Park, Nikolaus Pevsner said that his interiors "have a style, decidedly their own, different from Adam's or Chambers's or Holland's" their character coming out most clearly in the central staircase hallway, "profusely but very delicately decorated with plaster à la antique". [7]
Woodhall Park | |
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Type | Park and garden |
Official name | Woodhall Park |
Designated | 1987 |
Reference no. | 1000317 [8] |
Philip Boteler obtained a licence to create a park in the 16th century. [8] The present appearance of the park reflects landscaping done in the late 18th century for Rumbold. A weir was constructed to hold back the River Beane to create a "broadwater" within sight of the house. [9] In the 21st-century a new channel was dug bypassing the weir to allow fish migration. [10]
As a young man, Joseph Paxton was employed at Woodhall Park by Samuel Smith. He was an apprentice to Smith's gardener, William Griffin. [11] At that time, the garden appears to have had good facilities for fruit growing, [2] one of the activities for which Paxton later achieved fame when working for the Duke of Devonshire. The walled kitchen garden is listed grade II.
The park was listed in 1987 in the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England.
In the 19th century the Smith family diverted the route of the turnpike between Watton and Ware, moving it further from the house. The boundary of the park is marked by a brick wall along this road (now part of the A602) and also along the road between Watton and Hertford (now part of the A119). [8] There are gatekeepers' lodges controlling access from both roads. "Hertford Lodge East" is dated circa 1870; "Ware Lodge", dated circa 1840, is in Greek Revival style and Grade II listed. [8]
Hertford is the county town of Hertfordshire, England, and is also a civil parish in the East Hertfordshire district of the county. The parish had a population of 26,783 at the 2011 census.
Watton-at-Stone is a village and civil parish in Hertfordshire, England, and is midway between the towns of Stevenage and Hertford in the valley of the River Beane.
Aston is a village and civil parish in the East Hertfordshire district of Hertfordshire, England. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 844, increasing to 871 at the 2011 Census. Located on a ridge between Stevenage and the Beane Valley, Aston is a 10 minutes drive from the A1(M).
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Heath Mount School is a Church of England co-educational independent prep school near Watton-at-Stone, Hertfordshire, England. It admits pupils aged 3 to 13. It was founded as Heath Mount Academy in Hampstead in 1796. In 1934 it was relocated to a Georgian mansion on the Woodhall Estate in rural Hertfordshire. For the 2022 academic year, 498 students were enrolled: boarding pupils and day pupils and girls and boys.
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Sir Henry Chauncy was an English lawyer, topographer and antiquarian. He is best known for his county history of Hertfordshire, published in 1700.
The High Sheriff of Hertfordshire was an ancient Sheriff title originating in the time of the Angles, not long after the foundation of the Kingdom of England, which was in existence for around a thousand years. On 1 April 1974, under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1972, the title of Sheriff of Hertfordshire was retitled High Sheriff of Hertfordshire. The High Shrievalties are the oldest secular titles under the Crown in England and Wales, their purpose being to represent the monarch at a local level, historically in the shires.
Woodhall or Wood Hall may refer to:
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Colonel Abel Henry Smith was a British Conservative Party politician and an English landowner of the Smith banking family.
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Paul Benfield (1742–1810) was an English East India Company employee and trader, financier and politician. He is now known as a target for the rhetoric of Edmund Burke, and for his spectacular bankruptcy.
John Boteler, 1st Baron Boteler of Brantfield, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1625 to 1626. The Butlers of Hertfordshire claimed descent from Ralph le Boteler, butler to Robert de Beaumont, Count of Meulan and Earl of Leicester in the time of Henry I, and by the 15th century they had been seated at Watton for some time.
Philip Butler or Boteler, of Watton at Stone, Hertfordshire, was an English politician.
Aston Bury is a manor house near Aston, Hertfordshire, England. It is Grade I listed building.
Thomas Leverton was an English architect.