DiCamillo Companion
England

Hampton Court Castle

  • Built / Designed For: Sir Rowland Lenthall

    House & Family History: Hampton Court, Herefordshire, is one of the largest medieval manor houses in England. Sir Rowland Lenthall was given a license to crenellate in 1435. It was Lenthall who put up the quadrangular, partly fortified, manor house. The Coningsbys purchased the estate in 1510 (Disraeli used the family name for the hero of his novel). Thomas, 1st Earl of Coningsby, brought about enormous changes at Hampton Court; circa 1706-10 he regularized the 15th century façade and engaged George London to lay out the gardens. The Estate remained in the 1st Earl's family and passed by marriage into the possession of Viscount Malden, later 5th Earl of Essex, in 1781. Soon after inheriting, Viscount Malden put into action significant changes in the Gothick style, probably designed by James Wyatt. J.M.W. Turner visited Hampton Court in 1795 and produced important watercolors and pencil sketches of the Estate. Many of the watercolors are today in the collection of the Whitworth Art Gallery at the University of Manchester. Two of the Turner watercolors at the Yale Center for British Art in New Haven, Connecticut, were commissioned by Sir Richard Colt Hoare in 1806 to illustrate his copy of Thomas, Earl of Coningsby's private publication of "An Account of the Manor of Marden in Hertfordshire," 1722-25. John Arkwright, grandson of industrialist Sir Richard Arkwright, inventor of the spinning frame, purchased Hampton Court in 1810. The greatest transformation of the House began in the 1830s and was mostly to the designs of the amateur architect Charles Hanbury-Tracy, later 1st Lord Sudeley (the earlier attribution of this work to Jeffry Wyatville has now been disproved). The architects John and William Atkinson advised Arkwright, but the rebuilding of the House seems now clearly to have been to the designs of Hanbury-Tracy. The Arkwright family lived at Hampton Court until 1912, when they sold up to a Mrs. Burrell. In 1924 Mrs. Burrell sold the House to Viscountess Hereford; the viscounts Hereford held the property until 1972, when it was sold to Capt. The Hon. Philip Smith. In 1975 Hampton Court was sold again, this time to George Hughes, who completely restored the House In 2006 businessman Graham Ferguson Lacey purchased Hampton Court and 1,000 acres for £10 million. Though he makes his primary residence on the Isle of Man, Lacey maintains Hampton Court as one of his homes. A stained glass window, considered one of the finest produced in England in the early 15th century (1420-35), formerly in the Chapel at Hampton Court, is today in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, who purchased it in 1925 (see photo in "Images" section). The window, considered the finest medieval stained glass in America, was once part of a larger window that probably displayed all 12 Apostles (the window today shows eight of the Apostles) and the Pieta. Above the Apostles' heads are long scrolls with Latin inscriptions from the Apostles' Creed. All but one has his name on the dais below his feet. As a result of its 21st century conservation, and examination of stonework at Hampton Court, scholar Madeline Caviness has been able to pinpoint the window's original location – in the west wall of the south transept of Hereford Cathedral. It was very likely removed from the cathedral in the 1640s during the English Civil War to prevent Parliamentarians from destroying its papist imagery. The window was installed in the Chapel at Hampton Court after the Restoration and was completely in place by 1683 (it was likely at this point that the window was cut down in size, losing four of the Apostles, to enable it to fit into the Chapel at Hampton Court). Caviness attributes the glass painting to John Thornton of Coventry, the artist responsible for the Great East Window in York Minster.

    Collections: Leonard Knyff (1650-1722) painted two views of Hampton Court, formerly part of the collection of the House and now at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut. The Yale Center also has two views of the House by J.M.W. Turner and a view by John Stevens (died 1722). The Turner watercolors at Yale were commissioned by Sir Richard Colt Hoare in 1806 to illustrate his copy of Thomas, Earl of Coningsby's private publication of "An Account of the Manor of Marden in Hertfordshire," 1722-25. The State Bed from Hampton Court, made circa 1698 for Thomas, Baron Coningsby, is today in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; it was at Hampton Court until 1925. A settee with a scrolling foliage pattern, originally made in England for Hampton Court, 1690-1700, is today in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum, London.

  • Garden & Outbuildings: The gardens were designed by George London in the French style and are famous for their allées. London apparently worked under the supervision of William Talman, who may have designed the cruciform temple. There was also a large Neptune fountain in the gardens, described by Tom Lyttleton in 1758. Today the gardens include an organic walled Kitchen Garden, canals, pavilions, a maze, a secret tunnel to a waterfall, and the flooded Sunken Garden.

  • Architect: George London

    Date: Circa 1706-10
    Designed: Laid out gardens for 1st Earl of Coningsby

    View all houses

    Architect: James Wyatt

    Date: Post 1781
    Designed: Changes in the Gothick style for Viscount Malden (later 5th Earl of Essex)
    (Attribution of this work is uncertain)
    View all houses

    Architect: Charles Hanbury-Tracy (Sudeley)

    Date: 1830s-40s
    Designed: Rebuilt and virtually transformed House

    View all houses

    Architect: William Talman

    Date: 1706-10
    Designed: May have executed designs for North Façade; cruciform Temple in grounds.
    (Attribution of this work is uncertain)
    View all houses

    Architect: John Atkinson

    Date: 1835-41
    Designed: Advised Arkwright in remodeling

    View all houses
  • Vitruvius Britannicus: C. II, pls. 57, 58, 1717. C. III, pl. 75, 1725.

    John Bernard (J.B.) Burke, published under the title of A Visitation of the Seats and Arms of the Noblemen and Gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland, among other titles: Vol. II, p. 250, 1853.

    John Preston (J.P.) Neale, published under the title of Views of the Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, among other titles: 2.S. Vol. III, 1826.

    Country Life: XXX, 750 [Furniture], 787 [Furniture], 902 [Furniture], 1911. CLIII, 450, 518, 582, 1973.

  • Title: Sunday Times, The (London)
    Author: NA
    Year Published: NA
    Reference: Rich List 2008, pg. 80
    Publisher: London: Times Newspapers Ltd.
    ISBN: NA
    Book Type: Newspaper

    Title: V&A Guide to Period Styles: 400 Years of British Art and Design, The
    Author: Jackson, Anna; Hinton, Morna
    Year Published: 2002
    Reference: pg. 34
    Publisher: London: V&A Publications
    ISBN: 0810965909
    Book Type: Hardback

    Title: Burke's & Savills Guide to Country Houses, Volume II: Herefordshire, Shropshire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire
    Author: Reid, Peter
    Year Published: 1980
    Reference: pg. 33
    Publisher: London: Burke's Peerage
    ISBN: 0850110319
    Book Type: Hardback

    Title: Country Houses in Great Britain
    Author: NA
    Year Published: 1979
    Reference: pgs. 23-26, 84
    Publisher: New Haven: Yale Center for British Art
    ISBN: 0930606191
    Book Type: Softback

    Title: MFA: A Guide to the Collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
    Author: Wohlauer, Gilian Shallcross
    Year Published: 1999
    Reference: pg. 185
    Publisher: Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
    ISBN: 0878464727
    Book Type: Softback

    Title: Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600-1840, A - SOFTBACK
    Author: Colvin, Howard
    Year Published: 1995
    Publisher: New Haven: Yale University Press
    ISBN: 0300072074
    Book Type: Softback

  • House Listed: Grade I

    Park Listed: Grade II

  • Current Seat / Home of: Graham Ferguson Lacey; here since 2006.

    Past Seat / Home of: Sir Rowland Lenthall, 15th century. Thomas Coningsby, 1st Earl Coningsby, 17th-18th centuries; Coningsby family here 1510 until; 1781. William Anne Holles Capell, 4th Earl of Essex, 18th century. John Arkwright, 19th century; Arkwright family here 1810 until 1912. Mrs. Burrell, 1912-24. Robert Devereux, 16th Viscount Hereford, 20th century; Devereux family here 1924 until 1972. Capt. The Hon. Philip Smith, 1972-75. George Hughes, 1975-?

    Current Ownership Type: Individual / Family Trust

    Primary Current Ownership Use: Private Home

  • House Open to Public: Yes

    Phone: 01568-797-777

    Fax: 01568-797-472

    Email: [email protected]

    Website: http://www.hamptoncourt.org.uk

    Historic Houses Member: No

VISIT AND HELP PRESERVE HISTORIC BRITISH HOUSES

Help preserve Britain’s privately owned country houses by joining Historic Houses. Use code DICAM7 for a £7 discount off a new membership that will give you access to hundreds of historic houses.

Join Now

The DiCamillo Companion does not receive any compensation from the Historic Houses Association.