Hunton Park
Hunton Park | |
Hertfordshire | |
---|---|
Hunton Park | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | TL08960055 |
Location: | 51°41’35"N, 0°25’30"W |
History | |
Built 1909 | |
For: | Henry Stewart Gladstone |
Country house | |
Information | |
Condition: | Converted to hotel |
Owned by: | Ruparelia family |
Hunton Park is a large country house and estate in Abbots Langley, in south-western Hertfordshire. It was originally called Hazelwood House when first built in the early 19th century. The original house was destroyed in 1908 and completely rebuilt.
The house is now a hotel owned by the Ruparelia family. It is a Grade II* listed building.[1]
History
A wealthy Londoner Henry Botham built the first Hazelwood House from around 1810 as a country residence. Between 1810 and 1826 he acquired some 53 acres of surrounding land as a park.[2] The ownership of Hazelwood House stayed in the Botham family for many years. It later passed around 1850 to Sir Henry Robinson Montagu, the 6th Lord Rokeby, a soldier who had fought at Waterloo as a 16-year-old Ensign and later commanded a division of the British army in the Crimean War.[2] Other notable owners include Admiral Ralph Cator from 1886.
In the early twentieth century the Vicar of Honingham, Henry Stewart Gladstone bought the house.[2] He made a thousand pounds worth of improvements to the property, but a fire on 8 March 1908 completely destroyed the house, and it had to be demolished.[2]
Assisted by an insurance compensation of £10,500, Gladstone rebuilt the second Hazelwood House, similar in appearance to the first, but sited at a different angle to the ornamental grounds.[2]
In 1930, the house was sold to Francis Edwin Fisher, a substantial landowner, farmer, meat wholesaler and businessman who frequently travelled the world with his wife, the explorer and journalist Violet Cressy-Marcks. During their absences the house was left empty or rented out. Among the short-term occupants of this period was the Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, an exile from his country after the invasion by Italy in 1936.[3]
From 1939 until 1971 the house went through various uses and often stood empty. Part of the estate was taken over by the Ministry of Defence for aircraft manufacture,[3] later becoming the Rolls-Royce aircraft factory, and in the 1990s Leavesden Film Studios. In the 1970s, the cinema industry became interested in the house as a location, and a number of the Hammer House of Horror Productions were filmed there as well as The Executioner (1970) and The Raging Moon (1971).
Shortly after this period Paul Edwin Hember, the owner of several small businesses, bought the house and changed its name to Hunton Park.[2]
Outside links
- Website for the De Vere Hunton Park Hotel
- Lord Rokeby at Historyscape. Accessed Dec 2010
- Hazelwood House at Hertfordshire genealogy. Accessed Dec 2010
References
- ↑ National Heritage List 1173193: Hunton Park
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Hunton Park Ghost Hunt". http://www.frightnights.co.uk/home/index.php?cid=793. Retrieved 11 August 2013.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Hastie, Scott (1996). A Hertfordshire Valley.. Kings Langley: Alpine Press. p. 96. ISBN 0-9528631-0-3.
- Abbots Langley, An Outline History, by Scott Hastie, Abbots Langley Parish Council, 1986