Hinton Ampner House
Hinton Ampner House | |
National Trust | |
---|---|
Garden front of Hinton Ampner | |
Grid reference: | SU59642748 |
Location: | 51°2’42"N, 1°8’57"W |
Built 1790 | |
Information | |
Website: | Hinton Ampner |
Hinton Ampner House is a stately home with extensive gardens in Hinton Ampner, near New Alresford in Hampshire. The house and garden are owned by the National Trust and are opened to the public.
The house is a Grade II listed building.[1]
History
The garden was created by Ralph Stawell Dutton (1898–1985), the 8th and last Baron Sherborne, starting in 1930, making this a modern 20th-century garden. The property is indeed now more noted for its garden than the house. Previously, the parkland came directly up to the house, which was designed to be a hunting lodge. An earlier Tudor house stood close to the current site, before the current house was built.
The current house was built in 1790 but remodelled extensively in 1867. It was remodelled again in the Neo-Georgian]] style by Trenwith Wills and Lord Gerald Wellesley (later 7th Duke of Wellington) for Ralph Dutton between 1936 and 1939 to his vision of what it would have been like had it been built on its current scale in 1790; a Georgian country house.[2] It was badly damaged by fire in 1960, and restored again much as it had appeared in 1936.
The house contains a number of fine paintings. There is a set of paintings of the four seasons by Jacob de Wit, depicting cherubs painted in a three-dimensional monochrome style.
Ralph Dutton, with no direct heirs, gave the estate to the National Trust, on his death in 1985.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Hinton Ampner House) |
- Hinton Ampner - National Trust
References
- ↑ National Heritage List 1095121: Hinton Ampner House
- ↑ Dan Cruickshank (Summer 2012). "Wills and Wellesley". National Trust Magazine: 38.