Howick Hall

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Howick Hall
Northumberland
Howick Hall 01.jpg
Howick Hall
Location
Grid reference: NU246175
Location: 55°27’4"N, 1°36’36"W
History
Country house
Information
Owned by: Lord Howick of Glendale

Howick Hall is a mansion in the village of Howick in Northumberland. It is the ancestral seat of the Earls Grey and as such it was the home of Charles, 2nd Earl Grey, who served as Prime Minster of the United Kingdom from 1830 to 1834, overseeing the abolition of slavery in te Empire (and after whom incidentally Earl Grey tea is named).

Howick Hall is today a Grade II* listed building.

History

Howick has been owned by the Grey family since 1319. A tower house, which once stood on the site and which was demolished in 1780, was described in a survey of 1715 as 'a most magnificent freestone edifice in a square figure, flat roofed and embattled' and with 'a handsome court and gateway on the front'. The Hall which stands on the site today was built in 1782 by Newcastle architect, William Newton. The entrance was originally on the south side. The 2nd Earl Grey employed George Wyatt in 1809 to enlarge the house by moving the entrance to the north side, filling out the front hall and the two quadrants linking the house to its wings, and building the first terrace on the south side.

A fire destroyed the whole of the interior of the main house in 1926, with all of the contents of the top two floors. It was rebuilt in 1928 to designs by Sir Herbert Baker, who altered the north façade by introducing a portico above the front hall in order to make the house smaller with an open well in the middle, with a rotunda linking the front and back on the ground floor.

The family moved out of the main house shortly after the death of the 5th Earl Grey. In 1973 his grandson, Charles Baring, 2nd Baron Howick of Glendale, converted the west wing into a home, where he and his family now live.

Howick Hall is the location of the Howick Gardens and Arboretum.

Outside links

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References