Endsleigh Cottage

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Endsleigh Cottage
Devon

Endsleigh Hotel
Location
Grid reference: SX39107860
Location: 50°35’6"N, 4°16’27"W
History
Country house
Information
Condition: Converted to hotel

Endsleigh Cottage (now "Endsleigh House") is a country house near Milton Abbot, about six miles north-west of Tavistock in Devon.

The house is a Grade I listed building, and the gardens are Grade I listed in the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.[1] The house was built in the early 19th century for the Duke of Bedford. Today, it is a hotel.

History

Endsleigh Cottage near Milton Abbot, Devon'

The house was built between 1810 and 1816 for John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford as a private family residence, to the designs of Sir Jeffry Wyatville, in the style of the picturesque movement, and is a grand form of the cottage orné.

The house was situated within the manor of Milton Abbot, a former manor belonging to Tavistock Abbey, which had been granted with its lands by King Henry VIII to his ancestor John Russell, 1st Baron Russell (created in 1550 1st Earl of Bedford).[2] It is on the east bank of the River Tamar, over which it commands superb views to the south and west. Pevsner stated that "the situation of Endsleigh can hardly be matched".[3] It was usefully positioned as a residence whilst the Duke, normally residing at Woburn Abbey in Bedfordshire, was inspecting his extensive Bedford estates in Devon and Cornwall.

Before the Civil War, when in Devon the Earl of Bedford resided occasionally at Bedford House in Exeter, built by the family on the site of the Blackfriars Monastery, which had been granted, along with many other lands, to the first Earl of Bedford after the Dissolution of the Monasteries.[4] Endsleigh was also used by the family as a summer holiday home and salmon-fishing lodge. The London streets Endsleigh Street, Endsleigh Gardens and Endsleigh Place, leading off Tavistock Square, all built by a former Duke on the extensive Bedford Estate are named after the family's Devon property.

Description

The Swiss Cottage
The Dairy
Pond Cottage

Hussey described it as "the outstanding and probably most nearly perfect surviving instance of a romantic cottage orné, devised for an aristocratic owner under the influence of the taste for the picturesque".[5] The site was chosen by the Duchess, as a plaque in the stables records. It consists of a main range with two swept-back wings on either side. The roofline displays several chimney stacks in the Elizabethan style and dormer windows. The east wing was principally a service range, whilst the west wing is in the form of a pavilion known as the "Childrens' Cottage" linked by a rustic colonnade to the central block.

Grounds

The landscaping was designed by Humphry Repton and the grounds originally comprised a plantation of 300 acres, including thickly wooded sloped down to the river, and gardens of twenty acres. The buildings in the grounds include the Shell Grotto, a polygonal summer-house and the Swiss Cottage, restored by the Landmark Trust with a thatched roof. Also, the Dairy Dell, by Repton, Pond Cottages by a pool and the octagonal Dairy surrounded by a loggia, and the Holy Well, part of which is an ancient structure formerly situated at Leigh Barton, and used as the baptismal font of the hunting seat of the Abbots of Tavistock Abbey.[6] The following structures as well as the main house are Grade I listed: Rockery and Grotto, Stables, Salmon Larder and Ice House, Shell House and Grotto.

Today

In 2004 Endsleigh was owned by a fishing syndicate. Since 2005 it has been a hotel, which retains 108 acres of the grounds. Hotel Endsleigh is owned by Olga Polizzi and managed by her daughter Alex Polizzi.[7]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Endsleigh Cottage)

References

  1. National Heritage List 1000428: Endsleigh
  2. Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.132
  3. Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Devon, 1952; 1989 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09596-8
  4. Lysons, Devonshire, Vol.6, Devon, 1822, Nobility
  5. Hussey, Christopher, Country Life Magazine, CXXX, 246; CXXX, 296
  6. According to an inscription fixed on site, quoted by Pevsner, p.355
  7. "Relative Values: Olga Polizzi and her daughter Alexandra". Times Newspapers Limited (London: TimesOnline.co.uk). 6 July 2008. http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/celebrity/article4255343.ece. Retrieved 29 August 2009. 
  • Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Devon, 1952; 1989 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09596-8
  • Christopher Hussey (1961). "Endsleigh Cottage". Country Life Magazine CXXX: 246 & 296. 

Books

  • Bedford Estate Papers in the D.R.O., Devon Letters L 1258/82, containing full documentation of the building of the house including correspondence from Wyatville and Repton and monthly progress reports and accounts