Gaston Grange
Gaston Grange | |
Hampshire | |
---|---|
Gaston Grange | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SU65113906 |
Location: | 51°8’50"N, 1°4’14"W |
Village: | Bentworth |
History | |
Built 1890 | |
For: | Colonel Gordon Maynard Gordon-Ives |
Country house | |
Information |
Gaston Grange is a large country manor in the hamlet of Holt End in the parish of Bentworth, Hampshire. It is about a mile south-west of the centre of Bentworth and about four miles west of Alton, its nearest town.
History
The manor estate area was formerly part of the Bentworth Hall estate until the 1950s. In the late 19th century, Emma Gordon-Ives owned Bentworth Hall and in 1890 her son Colonel Gordon Maynard Gordon-Ives built Gaston Grange east of the current Bentworth Hall. In 1914, his son Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander Gordon lived in Gaston Grange. He served in the First World War and was also a politician dealing with Northern Ireland matters, dying in July 1923.[1]
After Alexander Gordon's death, the Bentworth Hall Estate was offered for sale by Messrs John D Wood & Co. and at this time consisted of 479 acres. The house once had a grand ballroom which was removed in the 1920s. The white painted house has masonry walls, a timber pitched roof with what is likely Welsh blue grey slate, and a wooden staircase made by the Devon-based firm Dart & Francis. Gaston Grange has been extensively renovated in recent times.