Rothamsted Manor

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Rothamsted Manor
Hertfordshire
Rothamsted Manor House.JPG
Rothamsted Manor
Location
Grid reference: TL12531317
Location: 51°48’21"N, 0°22’9"W
History
Country house
Information
Website: rothamstedmanor.com

Rothamsted Manor is a manor house near Harpenden in Hertfordshire.[1]

Buildings near the manor house

History

The first recorded mention of Rothamsted is in 1212, when Richard de Merston owned lands there. In 1221, a house with a chapel and garden are referred to in a land grant. By 1292 Rothamsted had passed to the Nowell family, passing to the Cresseys by 1355, and to the Bardolphs by 1525. By this time there was a substantial manor house, with at least 16 rooms.[2]

In 1623 Edmund Bardolph sold Rothamsted to Anne Wittewronge. The Wittewronges were calvinists who had fled religious persecution in Ghent in 1564, and had founded a brewery in London. In the 17th century, Sir John Wittewronge, Anne's son, gave the house its Dutch style. The manor remained with the Wittewronge family until 1763, when Thomas Wittewronge died and the manor passed to his cousin John Bennet. He in turn left the manor to John Bennet Lawes, the son of his sister.[2]

In 1843, Sir John Bennet Lawes, the son of the earlier John Bennet Lawes, founded the Rothamsted Experimental Station, an agricultural research station, on the grounds of the manor. In 1931, his descendants decided to sell the estate, but after a successful public appeal, the Experimental Station was able to finance the purchase of the estate in 1934.[2]

Rothamsted Research, Rothamsted Manor
The Centenary building, finished in 2003

In 1938 the Harpenden Urban District Council purchased the portion of the estate now known as Rothamsted Park from the Experimental Station, in order to provide playing fields and to preserve an important open space.

The remainder of the estate is still used by Rothamsted Research, as the Rothamsted Experimental Station is now known. The manor house used to serve as accommodation for staff, but now functions predominately as a function venue.[2]

Outside links

References