Boscobel House () is a
Grade II* listed building in the parish of
Boscobel in
Shropshire. It has been, at various times, a farmhouse, a hunting lodge, and a holiday home; but it is most famous for its role in the
escape of Charles II after the
Battle of Worcester in 1651. Today it is managed by
English Heritage.
Location
The building is just inside Shropshire, as is clear from all
Ordnance Survey maps of the area, although part of the property boundary is contiguous with the Shropshire –
Staffordshire
Staffordshire (; postal abbreviation Staffs.) is a landlocked county in the West Midlands region of England. It borders Cheshire to the northwest, Derbyshire and Leicestershire to the east, Warwickshire to the southeast, the West Midlands Cou ...
border, and it has a
Stafford
Stafford () is a market town and the county town of Staffordshire, in the West Midlands region of England. It lies about north of Wolverhampton, south of Stoke-on-Trent and northwest of Birmingham. The town had a population of 70,145 in t ...
post code. Boscobel is on land which belonged to
White Ladies Priory in the
Middle Ages, and at that time it was
extra-parochial. The priory was often described as being at
Brewood, which is in
Staffordshire
Staffordshire (; postal abbreviation Staffs.) is a landlocked county in the West Midlands region of England. It borders Cheshire to the northwest, Derbyshire and Leicestershire to the east, Warwickshire to the southeast, the West Midlands Cou ...
, and this may have contributed to the widespread belief that the house and priory are in Staffordshire. Brewood is the neighbouring parish, and the house is just south of the small village of
Bishops Wood
Bishops Wood, or Bishopswood () is a small village on the Staffordshire border with Shropshire. It is home to the Royal Oak public house, the first to be named after the nearby oak tree at Boscobel House in which King Charles II hid after the ...
, a constituent part of Brewood. Although technically still a separate civil parish, Boscobel's small population means it shares a parish council with
Donington, Shropshire. Local government reform in 1974 brought the parish, including Boscobel House and White Ladies, into
Bridgnorth District, which in 2009 was superseded by the new unitary authority of
Shropshire Council. The nearest city is
Wolverhampton. The house is just north of the
M54 Motorway.
History
Origins
Boscobel House was created around 1632, when landowner John Giffard of
White Ladies Priory converted a timber-framed farmhouse, built some time in the 16th century on the lands of
White Ladies Priory, into a hunting lodge.
The priory and its estate, including the farmhouse site, had been leased from the Crown by William Skeffington of Wolverhampton at the
Dissolution of the Monasteries about a century earlier. It passed into the Giffard family because Skeffington left it to his widow, Joan, and she subsequently married Edward Giffard, son of Sir John Giffard (died 1556) of
Chillington Hall
Chillington Hall is a Georgian country house near Brewood, Staffordshire, England, four miles northwest of Wolverhampton. It is the residence of the Giffard family. The Grade I listed house was designed by Francis Smith in 1724 and John Soan ...
. The reversion was sold to William Whorwood in 1540, which made him the effective owner, but one of the early lessees must have paid off Whorwood, because it was later passed on to Edward Giffard's heir, John.
John Giffard decided to make the farmhouse more useful by building a substantial extension to the south, including a living room and bedrooms more fitted to use by a
gentry family. Giffard called the new hunting lodge Boscobel House.
Thomas Blount (writing 1660), the main source for the events, portrays the naming as an after-dinner activity, and attributes it to
Sir Basil Brook(e), a prominent recusant from
Madeley, Shropshire
Madeley is a constituent town and civil parish in Telford and Wrekin in Shropshire, England. The parish had a population of 17,935 at the 2001 census.
Madeley is recorded in the Domesday Book, having been founded before the 8th century. Histo ...
, who was one of Giffard's guests at the
housewarming party. Boscobel is believed to come from the Italian phrase ''bosco bello'' meaning "in the midst of fair woods": in 1632, Boscobel House was surrounded by dense woodlands. Also, the many branches of the
Giffard family
Giffard is an Anglo-Norman surname, carried by a number of families of the Peerage of the United Kingdom and the landed gentry. They included the Earls of Halsbury and the Giffards of Chillington Hall, Staffordshire. Notable people with the surna ...
all claim ancestry from the lords of
Bolbec or Bolebec and Longueville in
Upper Normandy: Osbern de Bolebec became lord of Longueville in the early 11th century and his sons,
Osbern Giffard and
Gautier or Walter Giffard of Bolbec, were companions of
William the Conqueror.
Recusancy and the escape of Charles II
The Giffard family were
recusants –
Catholics
The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide . It is among the world's oldest and largest international institutions, and has played a ...
who refused to participate in the worship of the established
Church of England. For them, this brought fines, imprisonment and discrimination; for priests it could mean barbarous execution. The Giffards took care to surround themselves with reliable retainers; until the mid-19th century, after
Catholic Emancipation, their servants and tenants were mainly Catholic. The house itself served as a secret place for the shelter of Catholic priests, with at least one priest-hole. This secret purpose of the house was to play a key part in the history of the country. By 1651, when Boscobel played host to
Charles II, it was owned by John Giffard's heir, his daughter, Frances Cotton. Frances had married John Cotton, a
Huntingdonshire squire, in 1633, but was a widow by this time. She was not resident at the time of the events that made Boscobel House one of the most evocative sites in the English royalist imagination. It was here that
Charles II hid in a tree to escape discovery by
Parliamentary soldiers during his
escape after the Battle of Worcester.
Initially, Charles was led to
White Ladies Priory by Charles Giffard, a cousin of the owner, and his servant Francis Yates, the only man subsequently executed for his part in the escape. There, the Penderel family, tenants and servants of the Giffard family, began to play important roles in guiding and caring for him. From White Ladies,
Richard Penderel led Charles in an unsuccessful attempt to cross the
Severn near
Madeley, Shropshire
Madeley is a constituent town and civil parish in Telford and Wrekin in Shropshire, England. The parish had a population of 17,935 at the 2001 census.
Madeley is recorded in the Domesday Book, having been founded before the 8th century. Histo ...
. They were forced to retrace their steps and Charles took refuge at Boscobel, where he was met by Colonel
William Careless
Colonel William Careless (surname variants include Carelesse, Carless, Carles and Carlis) was a Royalist officer of the English Civil War. It has been estimated in various written sources that he was born c. 1620, however, it is more likely that ...
, whose brother rented land from the Giffards at Broom Hall,
Brewood. Careless and the King spent all day hiding in a nearby oak tree (which became known as
The Royal Oak), from where he could see the patrols searching for him. Later Charles spent the night hiding in one of Boscobel's
priest holes. He was moved from Boscobel to
Moseley Old Hall, another Catholic
redoubt near Wolverhampton, and ultimately escaped the region posing as the servant of
Jane Lane of
Bentley
Bentley Motors Limited is a British designer, manufacturer and marketer of luxury cars and SUVs. Headquartered in Crewe, England, the company was founded as Bentley Motors Limited by W. O. Bentley (1888–1971) in 1919 in Cricklewood, North ...
, whose family were also landowners at Broom Hall and at the Hyde in Brewood. The Lanes, although friends and business partners of the Giffards, were not recusants but of
Puritan sympathies and Jane's brother, Colonel John Lane, had taken Parliament's side in fighting around Wolverhampton during the Civil War.
Subsequent history
Frances Cotton, née Giffard, died shortly after these events, and both White Ladies and Boscobel passed via her daughter, Jane Cotton, who had married Basil Fitzherbert in 1648, to the Fitzherbert family of
Norbury Hall
Norbury Manor is a 15th-century Elizabethan manor house and the adjoining 13th-century stone-built medieval Norbury Hall, known as The Old Manor in Norbury near Ashbourne, Derbyshire. It is a Grade I listed building.
The manor was owned by the ...
,
Derbyshire. The Fitzherberts were major landowners and let Boscobel as a farm to a succession of tenants, including several members of the Penderel family. Boscobel featured prominently in the
Popish Plot
The Popish Plot was a fictitious conspiracy invented by Titus Oates that between 1678 and 1681 gripped the Kingdoms of England and Scotland in anti-Catholic hysteria. Oates alleged that there was an extensive Catholic conspiracy to assassinate C ...
: the informer
Stephen Dugdale
Stephen Dugdale (1640?-1683) was an English informer, and self-proclaimed discoverer of parts of the Popish Plot (which was in reality the fabrication of his fellow informer Titus Oates). He perjured himself on numerous occasions, giving false test ...
accused the guests who witnessed the Jesuit
John Gavan taking his final vows there in 1678 of plotting treason, and several of them, including Gavan himself, were executed or imprisoned. The estate and Boscobel were sold to Walter Evans, a Derbyshire industrialist, in 1812, although the Fitzherbert family retained the White Ladies Priory site. It was the Evans family who restored the house and gardens, often in fanciful ways, and nourished the legend of Charles II. A substantial farm building was appended to the northern side of the house in the 19th century, giving the present house three distinct wings. It was sold to
Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford
Lieutenant-Colonel Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford, DL, JP (6 October 1873 – 21 March 1957), styled Viscount Newport from 1898 to 1915, was a British peer, Conservative politician and soldier. He was a major landowner, owning up to . ...
in 1918, who placed both it and the tree in the hands of the
Ministry of Works in 1954. It passed via the
Department of the Environment to
English Heritage in 1984.
Boscobel House today
House
The three stages of building are readily apparent to the modern visitor. The 16th-century farm is clearly central and is easily distinguished from the 19th-century farm which adjoins it at right angles. The latter is brick-built but painted black and white to simulate timber framing. The main house, built by John Giffard around 1632, is mainly hidden behind the earlier and later structures on first approach. It is timber-framed, part brick, but covered in
stucco
Stucco or render is a construction material made of aggregates, a binder, and water. Stucco is applied wet and hardens to a very dense solid. It is used as a decorative coating for walls and ceilings, exterior walls, and as a sculptural and a ...
, which was applied in the 18th century to cover up faults in the structure and materials. Its east and west ends are marked respectively by the bowed structure, probably originally housing the staircase, and the
chimney
A chimney is an architectural ventilation structure made of masonry, clay or metal that isolates hot toxic exhaust gases or smoke produced by a boiler, stove, furnace, incinerator, or fireplace from human living areas. Chimneys are typic ...
stack.
File:Boscobel - 16th century farm frontage.jpg, Frontage of the 16th-century farm, adjoining the 19th-century structure, seen in the background. The older building is genuinely timber framed, although the outer skin has been replaced with brick.
File:Boscobel - dairy wattle and daub.jpg, The wattle and daub construction of the 16th-century building, still exposed where it is partitioned between the dairy and entrance hall.
File:Boscobel - internal timbers.jpg, Internal oak timbers, much perforated by woodworm, on the first floor of the 16th-century farm building.
File:Boscobel - old farm timbers.jpg, 16th-century timber framing seen inside the entrance hall, formerly part of an undivided 16th-century hall.
File:Boscobel - hunting lodge.jpg, The hunting lodge, framed by its own chimney stack and stairway
Stairs are a structure designed to bridge a large vertical distance between lower and higher levels by dividing it into smaller vertical distances. This is achieved as a diagonal series of horizontal platforms called steps which enable passage ...
.
File:Boscobel - hunting lodge west.jpg, The hunting lodge from the west. The stucco
Stucco or render is a construction material made of aggregates, a binder, and water. Stucco is applied wet and hardens to a very dense solid. It is used as a decorative coating for walls and ceilings, exterior walls, and as a sculptural and a ...
that covered the original patchwork of brick and daub has false windows painted on, a common practice at the time to avoid paying window tax.
File:Boscobel - turret.jpg, The stuccoed "turret" of the hunting lodge, actually a former stairwell that was turned into living and sleeping rooms by the 19th-century modification.
File:Boscobel - 19th century farm.jpg, The 19th-century farm building, painted in mock-Tudor style. This later building dominates the site from the farmyard and strikes the visitor first.
The 19th-century farm today houses an introductory display, covering the escape of Charles II and the history of Boscobel. The 16th-century farm, known as the north range, houses an exhibition of dairy equipment, focussing on the butter and cheese making that were important here in the Victorian period. In 2011, the upper floor was opened to the public for the first time, allowing a much better appreciation of the construction and clearly showing the differing woodwork, indicating that the building was much altered even before John Giffard's additions.
The western end of the north range is now separated off to provide the entrance hall and stairs for the main house, a change apparently made by the Evans family in the 19th century. The ground floor of John Giffard's development is occupied largely by the
Parlour, much-altered but containing a good deal of
Jacobean panelling. The Victorian fireplace is surmounted by three black marble panels, each engraved to illustrate aspects of Charles' escape – two of them designed by a daughter of Walter Evans. Through the Parlour is the so-called
Oratory, presented by the Evans family as a small prayer room, but probably where the 17th-century stairs were housed. This contains a portrait of Jane Penderel, known as Dame Joan, the matriarch of the family to whom Charles owed so much, and a chest, dated 1642, which appears to be mainly 19th-century work.
On the first floor of the main house is a bedroom known as the
Squire's Room. Between a fireplace and the bed is a door into a closet, which has a trapdoor into a small "secret place", alleged to be a
priest's hole
A priest hole is a hiding place for a priest built into many of the principal Catholic houses of England, Wales and Ireland during the period when Catholics were persecuted by law. When Queen Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558, there were se ...
. However, the space appears to be both too small and too obvious, as chimney areas were known to make good hiding places. This floor also contains another bedroom, known as the White Room. Originally, the entire first floor was probably a single large room; in the 17th century large bedrooms were used socially, while the Victorians developed the modern notion of the bedroom as a private space.
The second floor is a large attic, divided into two spaces today. In the first, at the very top of the stairs, is a trapdoor opening into a more convincing priest hole. This is where Charles II is thought to have spent an uncomfortable night, as it is only 4 feet (1.2m) in height while he was very tall for the time, around 6 ft 2in (1.85m). Beyond this attic space is the Bower Room, used as a bedroom in the 19th century.
File:Boscobel - entrance hall 01.jpg, The Entrance Hall, part of the 16th-century farm. A previous division into two floors is still apparent.
File:Boscobel - parlour dresser.jpg, A dresser in the parlour. 19th-century German reproduction of 16th or 17th-century work.
File:Boscobel - hunting lodge oratory.jpg, A view into the Oratory from the parlour, showing the fireplace and the portrait of "Dame Joan" Pendrell.
File:Boscobel - oratory chest.jpg, Carved chest commemorating 17th-century events – probably 19th-century work on an earlier artefact.
File:Boscobel - Squire's Room.jpg, The Squire's Room, a first floor room furnished in 17th-century style.
File:Boscobel - hunting lodge 2nd floor.jpg, The upper floor of the hunting lodge, originally an attic store, but converted into bedrooms in the 19th century.
Grounds
Within the grounds is an independently run themed tea room, the 1940s Tea Room, which has a full hot and cold menu all year round and is situated in the old stables. This opened in May 2018 and is open from 08:30 to 5pm, Wednesday through to Friday, all year round (even when the main house is closed). Entrance is round the side of the house, and no admission charges apply https://www.facebook.com/the1940sTeaRoom/
North of the house lies a large farmyard, mostly surrounded by Victorian farm buildings, although there is a large 17th-century
barn. The yard provides picnic space, as well as housing a display of Victorian farm machinery and equipment.
To the south are the formal gardens. First is a
parterre hedged with
box, laid out in recent times but occupying approximately the area of a box garden shown in 17th-century views of Boscobel. On its south-west corner is the Mount, a mound topped by a modern shelter, where Charles spent the day reading.
[O. J. Weaver (1987): Boscobel House and White Ladies Priory, London: English Heritage, pp. 21–26.]
Beyond the formal area is a kitchen garden with an
orchard of fruit trees. Alongside runs a walk flanked on both sides by
hazelnut
The hazelnut is the fruit of the hazel tree and therefore includes any of the nuts deriving from species of the genus ''Corylus'', especially the nuts of the species ''Corylus avellana''. They are also known as cobnuts or filberts according t ...
trees.
The Royal Oak
The
Royal Oak stands about 150 yards (137m) south-west of the house, in a farmer's field, but with an access path. It is believed to be a direct descendant of the original tree used by Charles and Careless to hide from the Parliamentary soldiers, although it has sometimes been presented as the actual tree. It has been surrounded by iron railings for many decades, but an outer wooden fence was added to protect visitors from falling timber after major cracks appeared in Autumn 2010. It has suffered badly from tourist depredations in the past, but its main threat is bad weather.
Three third generation descendants of the Royal Oak have been ceremonially planted nearby:
# In 1897, a tree was planted on the western edge of the garden of Boscobel House by
Augustus Legge, then
bishop of Lichfield, to commemorate the
Diamond Jubilee of
Queen Victoria.
# A further tree was planted ceremonially in 1951 near the site of the original Royal Oak by the
Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford
Lieutenant-Colonel Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford, DL, JP (6 October 1873 – 21 March 1957), styled Viscount Newport from 1898 to 1915, was a British peer, Conservative politician and soldier. He was a major landowner, owning up to . ...
, who was the owner of Boscobel House at the time, to mark the
tercentenary of Charles II's escape.
# Another oak sapling grown from one of the Son's acorns was planted in 2001 by
Prince Charles
Charles III (Charles Philip Arthur George; born 14 November 1948) is King of the United Kingdom and the 14 other Commonwealth realms. He was the longest-serving heir apparent and Prince of Wales and, at age 73, became the oldest person to ...
.
Gallery
File:Boscobel - dairy 01.jpg, Display of butter-making equipment on the ground floor of the 16th-century farm.
File:Boscobel - dairy 02.jpg, Curd mill and cheese
Cheese is a dairy product produced in wide ranges of flavors, textures, and forms by coagulation of the milk protein casein. It comprises proteins and fat from milk, usually the milk of cows, buffalo, goats, or sheep. During production, ...
press in the dairy display.
File:Boscobel - water pump.jpg, Water pump outside the 19th-century farm building.
File:Boscobel - farm machinery.jpg, Display of farm machinery in the yard: single furrow plough
A plough or plow ( US; both ) is a farm tool for loosening or turning the soil before sowing seed or planting. Ploughs were traditionally drawn by oxen and horses, but in modern farms are drawn by tractors. A plough may have a wooden, iron or ...
, potato plough, and rake
Rake may refer to:
* Rake (stock character), a man habituated to immoral conduct
* Rake (theatre), the artificial slope of a theatre stage
Science and technology
* Rake receiver, a radio receiver
* Rake (geology), the angle between a feature on a ...
s.
File:Boscobel - nut orchard.jpg, The nut garden, an avenue of hazelnut
The hazelnut is the fruit of the hazel tree and therefore includes any of the nuts deriving from species of the genus ''Corylus'', especially the nuts of the species ''Corylus avellana''. They are also known as cobnuts or filberts according t ...
trees.
File:Boscobel - mount and oaks.jpg, The Mount, with the Royal Oak and the tercentenary oak in the background.
File:Boscobel - Royal Oak 2011.jpg, The Royal Oak as it appeared in 2011. It was further distanced from visitors after serious cracks were discovered in Autumn 2010.
File:Boscobel - tercentenary oak.jpg, Granddaughter tree of the Royal Oak, planted in 1951 to commemorate the tercentenary of the escape of Charles II.
File:Boscobel - tercentenary plaque.jpg, Commemorative plaque on the third generation oak planted in 1951.
Opening
Boscobel House and its grounds are generally open from Wednesday to Sunday each week in the summer (April to October). There are entrance charges, although entry is free to English Heritage members. Free educational group visits are available by arrangement.
See also
*
*
Listed buildings in Boscobel
Boscobel is a civil parish in Shropshire, England. It contains six listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England
The National Heritage List for England (NHLE) is England's official database of protected heritag ...
References
External links
English Heritage entry: Boscobel House– official site
Thomas Blount: Boscobel or the History of His Sacred Majesties Most Miraculous PreservationAvailable in various formats at Internet Archive, this is the earliest, not entirely reliable account, of the escape of Charles II, published shortly after the Restoration in 1660.
BBC on Boscobel House*
ttps://web.archive.org/web/20040806001908/http://louisabrown.net/Boscobel.htm Postcard images from a personal site*
{{coord, 52.6716, -2.2416, display=title, format=dms, region:GB_type:landmark
Country houses in Shropshire
Grade II* listed buildings in Shropshire
English Heritage sites in Shropshire
Historic house museums in Shropshire
Timber framed buildings in England