Hackwood House

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Hackwood House
Hampshire
Hackwood House - south facade - geograph.org.uk - 818288.jpg
Hackwood Park
Location
Grid reference: SU64704963
Location: 51°14’32"N, 1°4’28"W
Town: Basingstoke
History
Built 1683 – 1687
Manor
Information

Hackwood House is a large country house and its estate, Hackwood Park, by Winslade, an overwhelmingly rural parish immediately south of Basingstoke in Hampshire.

The house is a Grade II* listed building.[1]

The wide estate primarily consists of an early 18th-century ornamental woodland and formal lawn garden. In its 260 acres stand 23 separately listed structures including a teahouse pavilion, an ornamental bridge, statue of George I of Great Britain, three dispersed stone tōrōs, five urns and two fountains, a coach house and stables. Sheep and deer are tended to on grounds behind a variously arc-shaped and straight ha-ha wall.

The park and gardens are Grade I listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.[2]

History

The estate was owned by the manor or rectory of Eastrop until 1223,[3] when it became a nobleman's deer park in its own right.[2] It was acquired by William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester in the sixteenth century.[2]

The bulk of the structure of the house currently standing was built from 1683 to 1687 for a son of the fifth Marquess, Charles Paulet, created Duke of Bolton.[2] It currently has 24 bedrooms and 20 bathrooms. The estate was inherited by his son, Charles Paulet, 2nd Duke of Bolton in 1699, followed by his grandson, Charles Powlett, 3rd Duke of Bolton in 1772.[2]

The estate was painted by Paul Sandby in 1764.

A deer on the grounds of Hackwood Park

Lord Curzon was a tenant from 1906 until his death in 1925,[4][5] and it was he who had restored the ancient open-air cockpit, “a hollow, grass-sown cup with sloping bank surrounded by a row of yews and with a flight of steps leading down to the floor of the arena.”[6]

The estate was sold in 1936 to William Berry, 1st Viscount Camrose. During the Second World War it served as a psychiatric hospital for the Canadian Army.[7] When Lord Camrose died in 1954 the property was inherited by his son, Seymour Berry, 2nd Viscount Camrose, who remained its owner until his death in 1995. His wife, Lady Camrose, the mother of Aga Khan IV, lived there until her death in 1997.

The property was put on the market in 2016.

Gardens

The grounds, outside of the focal lawn known as Spring Wood, were designed by Charles Bridgeman, with additional buildings designed by James Gibbs.[2] Spring Wood is of academic interest as may be the sole surviving garden wood laid out in the French style. It has eight sectors divided by walkways, many of which the listed features such as the temple, a fountain and amphitheatre. In the spring, the woodland is colour-filled with bulbs and wild flowers.

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References

  1. National Heritage List 1092734: Hackwood House (Grade II* listing)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 National Heritage List 1000332: Hackwood Park (Register of Historic Parks and Gardens)
  3. A History of the County of Hampshire - Volume 4 pp 147-149: Parishes: Eastrop (Victoria County History)
  4. de Courcy, Anne. The Viceroy's Daughters. 
  5. Rose, Kenneth. Curzon: Most Superior Person. 
  6. 'The Life of Lord Curzon,” volume 3, (Ronaldshay, 1928)
  7. Feasby, W.R.. "Official History of the Canadian Medical Services: 1939-1945". http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dhh-dhp/his/docs/CMS_vol2_e.pdf.