Mitford Old Manor House is an historic English manor house at
Mitford, Northumberland
Mitford is a village in the Wansbeck parliamentary constituency, in Northumberland, England, about west of Morpeth.
History
Although the foundation of Mitford is unknown, it was a barony during the Anglo-Saxon era. At the time of the Norm ...
and is a
Grade II* listed building
In the United Kingdom, a listed building or listed structure is one that has been placed on one of the four statutory lists maintained by Historic England in England, Historic Environment Scotland in Scotland, in Wales, and the Northern Irel ...
. The Manor of Mitford was held from ancient times by the
Mitford family
The Mitford family is an aristocratic English family, whose principal line had its seats at Mitford, Northumberland. Several heads of the family served as High Sheriff of Northumberland. A junior line, with seats at Newton Park, Northumberland, ...
.
The Manor House previously stood, adjacent to the old church of St Mary Magdalene, on the eastern side of the
River Wansbeck
The River Wansbeck runs through the county of Northumberland, England. It rises above Sweethope Lake, Lough on the edge of Fourlaws Forest in the area known locally as The Wanneys (Great Wanney Crag, Little Wanney Crag; thus the "Wanneys Beck") ...
. The substantial ruins now standing on the site represent the remains of a 16th-century house and of a porch tower built in about 1637.
The original house was substantially demolished and rebuilt in about 1810, then abandoned by the Mitfords when they built a new mansion house,
Mitford Hall
Mitford Hall is a Georgian mansion house and Grade II* listed building standing in its own park overlooking the River Wansbeck at Mitford, Northumberland.
It was built in 1828 by the Mitford family to a design by architect John Dobson, to repla ...
, and park on the opposite bank of the river in 1828. In about 1960 a modern house was created out of the kitchen wing.
History
An early description of the ruin was given in about 1824 by
Eneas Mackenzie
Eneas Mackenzie (1778–1832) was an English topographer.
Life
He was born in Aberdeenshire; his parents moved to Newcastle upon Tyne, when he was three years old. After working with his father as a shoemaker, he became a Baptist minister, and the ...
who said that the greater part of the building had been taken down about 12 years ago by Bertram Mitford (1777-1842) who was intending to build a new house across the river. This means that it was probably dismantled in about 1812. He mentioned that the kitchen which still remained was occupied by the gardener.
A similar statement was made by
John Hodgson who wrote about Mitford Manor in 1832 who said “the greater part of this seat- house was taken away about twenty years since” (that is 1812). He described what was standing in about 1830 in the following terms.
:''"The mansion-house, of which the turreted porch and part of the kitchen and offices still remain, were probably first occupied by the Mitford family when they acquired an accession of property here in the time of Philip and Mary (i.e. about 1550) and the tower, and other additions might be made to it in 1637 which is the date of the tablet above the door bearing the arms of Mitford empaling Wharton."''
The 1637 additions were made by
Robert Mitford
Robert Mitford (1612–1674) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1659.
Mitford was the son of Cuthbert Mitford, of Mitford, Northumberland. He was admitted at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 1634. He may have been a ...
(1612-1674) and his wife Philadelphia Wharton. Robert was born in 1612. He was the only son of Cuthbert Mitford who owned the Mitford estate. He went to the
University of Cambridge
, mottoeng = Literal: From here, light and sacred draughts.
Non literal: From this place, we gain enlightenment and precious knowledge.
, established =
, other_name = The Chancellor, Masters and Schola ...
and became a lawyer. In about 1831 he married Philadelphia Wharton who was the daughter of Humphrey Wharton of Gillingwood. In 1659 he was elected to Parliament as the Member for Morpeth. He died in 1674 and was succeeded by his eldest son Humphrey Mitford. The property descended through the Mitford family until it came into the possession of Bertram Mitford and his wife Frances.
In 1812 Bertram partially demolished the house and from then it became the residence of the gardener. One of the first gardeners was Bartholomew Harbottle (1777-1862) who was mentioned in 1825 as being in
Mitford, Northumberland. He was a bachelor and is shown as living in the Manor House in both the 1851 and 1861 Census. There is an elaborate grave in the churchyard of St Mary Magdalene which is in his honour. The inscription says: “In memory of Bartholomew Harbottle who died March 31st 1862 aged 86. Having been for the last 46 years of his life the trusted servant of the Mitford family.
In 1842 William Howitt visited
Mitford and gave the following description of the Manor House where Bartholomew now lived. He said.
:''"But the view of the old Manor-house pleased me even still more as I approached it. Its battlemented tower, with large mullioned windows boarded up, and converted into a dovecote; the arched entrance below, with the family escutcheon over it, and the beehives seen within it ; the broken walls ; the old yew trees about it ; the part converted into a tenement covered with ivy, with its ancient porch supported on two stone pillars ; the simple garden; the orchard; the walks clean swept; the lofty trees overhanging, — realized all that the poetry of rural life has feigned or imaged forth from such beautiful realities as this. As I stood and gazed on it, in silent admiration, the man who lives in the part tenanted came out with a corn measure, and whistling his pigeons, they flew down around him in the orchard, and completed the picture."''
[Howitt, William 1842 “Visits to remarkable places;old halls, battlefields, and scenes illustrative of striking passages in English history and poetry.” P, 391]
Online reference
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Other gardeners who lived at the Manor House were William Duncan (1871 Census) and George Douglass and his wife Margaret who are recorded in both the 1901 and 1911 Census.
References
Gallery
File:Manor House Mitford 1814.jpg, Engraving of Mitford Manor House in 1814
File:Manor House Mitford 1828.jpg, Engraving of Mitford Manor House in 1828
File:Manor House Mitford 1939.jpg, Photo of Mitford Manor House in 1939
File:Manor House Mitford arms 1930.jpg, Photo of the Coat of Arms taken in 1930
External links
Keys to the Past
SINE Project
Country houses in Northumberland
Grade II* listed buildings in Northumberland
History of Northumberland
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