Hampden House

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Hampden House
Buckinghamshire
Hampden House.jpg
Hampden House
Location
Grid reference: SP848024
Location: 51°42’53"N, 0°46’23"W
Data
Local Government

Hampden House is a country house in the Chilterns, in Buckinghamshire, outside the village of Great Hampden, which is between Great Missenden and Princes Risborough. The house is named after the Hampden family. The Hampdens (later Earls of Buckinghamshire) are recorded as owning the site from before the Norman conquest. They lived continually in the house until 1938.

Early history

The core of the present house is Elizabethan. However the south wing known, for some anachronistic reason, as King John's tower dates to the 14th century. This tower is constructed of clunch, a building material which is a combination of chalk and mud. The tower has traceried Gothic windows and the remains of the original spiral staircase.

A legend, relevant to this part of the house, is that King Edward III and the Black Prince stayed at Hampden House. During the stay the prince and his Hampden host were jousting, when a quarrel arose, during which the prince was punched in the face by his host. This act of lèse majesté caused the king and Prince to quit the place in great wrath, and cause their host to forfeit some of his estates to the Crown. There is, however no documentary evidence for this act, or of the subsequent revenge although the Black Prince is known to have possessed land in nearby Princes Risborough during his life.

The greater part of the original house was rebuilt in brick in the 17th century, this was again altered in the 18th century. The East wing overlooking the gardens is of a severe classical 18th century style, built between two earlier wings.

The chief feature of the grounds is 'The Great Avenue' through the woods bordered by rhododendrons and ancient oaks. It is terminated by two small lodges known, because of their design, as the 'Pepper Pots'. It is said that the avenue was cut through the wood to facilitate easy access to the house for Queen Elizabeth I when she was entertained at Hampden, during one of her progresses, by Griffith Hampden Esq.

Gothic rebuilding

It is the north and west ranges of the house that have never received the architectural acclaim they deserve, remodelled circa 1750 to a design by the architect Thomas Iremonger, with battlements and ogee topped windows, they are a form of gothic known as Strawberry Hill. This style predates the so-called invention of Strawberry Hill Gothic at Horace Walpole's house by nearly twenty years.

The interior of the house was also remodelled at this time, when a suite of magnificent state rooms were created with remarkable rococo ceilings, and superb marble fireplaces. One fireplace is of especial note carved by Sir Henry Cheere. The 60-foot-long, panelled, Great Hall with its huge fireplace is the largest room in the house.

The Hampden and Hobart families

Also in the grounds is the parish church, containing many memorials to the Hampden family including a monument to John Hampden, the celebrated leader of resistance to royal absolutism, and who died of wounds received at the Battle of Chalgrove during the Civil War in 1643 fighting for the Parliamentarians. Hampden had earlier achieved fame and notoriety by his refusal to pay the Ship Money tax, introduced by the near bankrupt King Charles I. Hampden was prosecuted for refusing to pay the tax on his lands in Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire. He was tried and found guilty, and consequently became a public hero, known as 'The Patriot'. The spot where he refused to pay is marked by a monument in the grand avenue at Hampden House, although the exact location of the actual site is in dispute.

Like many old and aristocratic families the Hampdens, for generations closely associated with the Whig party, eventually found themselves with financial problems. These were exacerbated by one owner of the house who, while Treasurer of the Navy, invested heavily personally, and with Government funds in the South Sea Bubble the resultant crash in 1720 was devastation for the family fortune. Large parts of the estate were sold until only the house and its immediate surroundings remained in the family's hands. The family never completely regained its former position or wealth.

The true male line of the Hampden family eventually died out. In 1824 George Robert Hobart-Hampden, 5th Earl of Buckinghamshire inherited Hampden House and its estates from the heirless Hampden family. His ancestor, Sir John Hobart, 3rd baronet, had married Mary Hampden, a daughter of the house circa 1655. The 5th Earl then joined the Hampden name to his own, which has continued through the family to this day.

Hampden House today

Hampden House Main Entrance

As a result of the family's financial problems, Hampden House suffered; cracked brickwork was not repaired but rendered in cement, necessary repairs were not carried out, and general deterioration set in, until in 1938 the family decided to let the house. The first tenants were a private girls' school. The interiors suffered greatly under this regime. The second tenants, Hammer film company, specialising in the making of horror films, no doubt saw the gothic aspects of the house as an attraction as they appeared in quite a lot of their films, and notably the 1980 "Hammer House of Horror" UK TV series.

Salvation for Hampden House finally came with its freehold sale, to an insurance group, which between 1986 and 1989 executed a huge program of essential rebuilding. The magnificent state rooms were restored to their former glory, while the unseen upper floors and service areas are now internally modern offices.

The house and grounds are still used occasionally for filming, and though not open to the public, the state rooms are available for hire as a wedding venue. The building is a Grade I listed building.[1]

Outside links

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References

  1. National Heritage List 1311378: Hampden House