Stowe House in the parish of
Kilkhampton
Kilkhampton ( kw, Kylgh) is a village and civil parish in northeast Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
The village is on the A39 about four miles (6 km) north-northeast of Bude.
Kilkhampton was mentioned in the Domesday Book as "Chilc ...
in
Cornwall
Cornwall (; kw, Kernow ) is a historic county and ceremonial county in South West England. It is recognised as one of the Celtic nations, and is the homeland of the Cornish people. Cornwall is bordered to the north and west by the Atlantic ...
, England, UK, was a mansion built in 1679 by
John Grenville, 1st Earl of Bath (1628–1701) and demolished in 1739. The Grenville family were for many centuries lords of the manor of Kilkhampton, which they held from the
feudal barony of Gloucester
The feudal barony of Gloucester or Honour of Gloucester was one of the largest of the mediaeval English feudal baronies in 1166, comprising 279 knight's fees, or manors. The constituent landholdings were spread over many counties. The location o ...
, as they did their other principal seat of nearby
Bideford
Bideford ( ) is a historic port town on the estuary of the River Torridge in north Devon, south-west England. It is the main town of the Torridge local government district.
Toponymy
In ancient records Bideford is recorded as ''Bedeford'', ''By ...
in Devon. It is possible that the family's original residence at Kilkhampton was
Kilkhampton Castle
Penstowe Castle, also called Kilkhampton Castle, was a medieval fortification built near Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England, possibly during the years of the civil war in the 12th century known as the Anarchy.
History
The precise date of Penstowe C ...
, of which only the groundworks survive, unusual in that it had a
motte
A motte-and-bailey castle is a European fortification with a wooden or stone keep situated on a raised area of ground called a motte, accompanied by a walled courtyard, or bailey, surrounded by a protective ditch and palisade. Relatively easy to ...
with two
baileys.
History
''(For descent of Grenville family of Stowe see:
Manor of Bideford
The manor of Bideford in North Devon was held by the Grenville family between the 12th and 18th centuries. The full descent is as follows:
Anglo-Saxons
Hubba the Dane was said to have attacked Devon in the area around Bideford near Northam o ...
)''
The Grenville family's earliest seat was in their
manor of Bideford
The manor of Bideford in North Devon was held by the Grenville family between the 12th and 18th centuries. The full descent is as follows:
Anglo-Saxons
Hubba the Dane was said to have attacked Devon in the area around Bideford near Northam o ...
in Devon, but from the 14th century they were also seated at Stowe. The last house on the site was built in about 1675 by
John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath (1628–1701), created in 1660 in recompense for his great assistance in the
Restoration
Restoration is the act of restoring something to its original state and may refer to:
* Conservation and restoration of cultural heritage
** Audio restoration
** Film restoration
** Image restoration
** Textile restoration
* Restoration ecology
...
of King Charles II,
Baron Granville
Baron Granville was a title that was created twice in the Peerage of England. The first creation came on 20 April 1661 when John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath was made Baron Granville of Kilkhampton and Biddeford. He was made Viscount Granville and ...
,
Viscount Granville and
Earl of Bath
Earl of Bath was a title that was created five times in British history, three times in the Peerage of England, once in the Peerage of Great Britain and once in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It is now extinct.
Earls of Bath; First cre ...
.
Description
The house was built of brick with stone dressings and formed the shape of a rectangle, of three floors with hipped roof incorporating dormer windows and topped by a cupola, eleven bays wide by seven bays deep. There was an extensive deer park with formal gardens including fountains and statues. It was of similar style to
Coleshill House
Coleshill House was a country house in England, near the village of Coleshill, Oxfordshire, Coleshill, in the Vale of White Horse. Historically, the house was in Berkshire but since boundary changes in 1974 its site is in Oxfordshire.
The buil ...
,
Lindridge House (demolished) and most comparable to
Belton House.
Demolition
Charles Granville, 2nd Earl of Bath
Charles Granville, 2nd Earl of Bath ( bapt. 31 August 1661 – 4 September 1701) was an English soldier, politician, diplomat, courtier and peer.
Born with the courtesy title of Lord Lansdown in 1661, he was the eldest son of John Granville, 1st E ...
(1661–1701)
succeeded his father in 1701 but died in a shooting accident, possibly suicide, shortly afterwards. He left as heir his nine-year-old only son
William Henry Granville, 3rd Earl of Bath (1692–1711) who died in 1711 aged 19 without progeny. The inheritance was divided between the second earl's sisters and a cousin
George Granville, Baron Lansdowne (died 1735), after whose death the family became extinct. The house was demolished in 1739.
In Polwhele's ''History of Cornwall'', it is stated that a man resident in the nearby Grenville manor of Stratton lived long enough to see its site a cornfield before the building existed, and after the building was destroyed a cornfield again. The house was sold for building materials in 1739, and much of its fabric survives, having been used in the contemporary construction of
West Country
The West Country (occasionally Westcountry) is a loosely defined area of South West England, usually taken to include all, some, or parts of the counties of Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset, Bristol, and, less commonly, Wiltshire, Glo ...
buildings.
Survivals removed
The most notable surviving fabric of Stowe House exists as follows:
*
Stowe House, Buckinghamshire. The carved cedar wood in the chapel, executed by Michael Chuke, was bought by Lord Cobham and applied to the same purpose at his mansion of Stowe in Buckinghamshire.
[Granville, Rev. Roger, Rector of Bideford (19th century), article published in Hawker, Robert S., ]
Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall
', London, 1903, p.274, Appendix E(a), Stowe and the Granvilles
*
Prideaux Place
Prideaux Place is a grade I listed Elizabethan country house in the parish of Padstow, Cornwall, England. It has been the home of the Prideaux family for over 400 years. The house was built in 1592 by Sir Nicholas Prideaux (1550–1627), a dist ...
, Padstow, of which the Grenville Room contains carved woodwork from Stowe.
*
Cross House,
Little Torrington, Devon, in which exists the ornately carved wooden grand staircase from Stowe, of three flights around a square well. The balustrades are formed in open-work carving in the style of
Grinling Gibbons
Grinling Gibbons (4 April 1648 – 3 August 1721) was an Anglo-Dutch sculptor and wood carver known for his work in England, including Windsor Castle and Hampton Court Palace, St Paul's Cathedral and other London churches, Petworth House and othe ...
of tumbling
putti
A putto (; plural putti ) is a figure in a work of art depicted as a chubby male child, usually naked and sometimes winged. Originally limited to profane passions in symbolism,Dempsey, Charles. ''Inventing the Renaissance Putto''. University of ...
entwined in scrolls of foliage and flowers.
*
The Guildhall,
South Molton
South Molton is a town in Devon, England. It is part of the North Devon local government district. The town is on the River Mole. According to the 2001 census the civil parish of South Molton had a population of 4,093, increasing to 5,108 at the ...
, Devon, 1739–41, which incorporates an entire highly ornate small room, known as "The Mayor's Parlour", used historically by the town's mayor for entertaining. It includes plasterwork decorative picture frames, a decorated plaster ceiling, four doorcases with gilded pediments, a large overmantel painting in the style of
Rubens of "
Atalanta
Atalanta (; grc-gre, Ἀταλάντη, Atalantē) meaning "equal in weight", is a heroine in Greek mythology.
There are two versions of the huntress Atalanta: one from Arcadia (region), Arcadia, whose parents were Iasus and Clymene (mythology ...
presented with the head of the
Calydonian Boar
The Calydonian boar hunt is one of the great heroic adventures in Greek legend. It occurred in the generation prior to that of the Trojan War, and stands alongside the other great heroic adventure of that generation, the voyage of the Argonauts, ...
by
Meleager
In Greek mythology, Meleager (, grc-gre, Μελέαγρος, Meléagros) was a hero venerated in his ''temenos'' at Calydon in Aetolia. He was already famed as the host of the Calydonian boar hunt in the epic tradition that was reworked by Ho ...
" and four classical
capriccio scenes in small rectangular panels above the doors. The Corporation of South Molton, who were then building a new Town Hall and Council Chamber, purchased the following (prices in £, s, d):
** (£35 0s 0d)
** ( £5 17s 6d)
** (£11 13s 0d)
** (£1 16s 0d)
** (£19 10s 0d)
** (£2 16s 0d)
**172 rustic quoins at 1 (£8 12s 0d)
** (£2 2s 0d)
** (£1 11s 6d)
** (£2 2s 0d)
**A carved Cornish ''(i.e. cornice)'' and Triumph of K. Charles II. (£7 7s 0d)
**2 right panel doors (£1 1s 0d)
These articles, with many others, were taken to Bude, shipped to Barnstaple, and thence carted to South Molton. The outlay for the whole amounted to £178. The "carved Cornish and Triumph of Charles II" is still to be seen over the fireplace in the old dining-room in the Town Hall at South Molton.
Survivals on site
The Steward's House survives at Stowe as a farmhouse, and some new farmhouses were built locally from the unsold materials from Stowe and are notable for their fine appearance, for example Penstowe, also in the parish.
Thynne
The manor of Kilkhampton was still owned in the early 20th century by descendants of Lady Grace Grenville, a daughter of the 1st Earl of Bath, namely by a junior branch of the Thynne family of
Longleat
Longleat is an English stately home and the seat of the Marquess of Bath, Marquesses of Bath. A leading and early example of the Elizabethan era, Elizabethan prodigy house, it is adjacent to the village of Horningsham and near the towns of War ...
in Wiltshire, created
Marquess of Bath in 1789.
Francis John Thynne, of
Haynes Park
Haynes Park is a Georgian country house which stands in parkland at Haynes Church End, Bedfordshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building.
Originally known as Hawnes Park it was built c.1725 for John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville, a promine ...
, Bedfordshire, was lord of the manors of Kilkhampton, Stratton and Binhamy.
[Per inscription on monument in Kilkhampton Church to Lt Col. Algernon Carteret Thynne (1868–1917)] He was the second son of Rev.
Lord John Thynne
Rev. Lord John Thynne (7 November 1798 – 9 February 1881) was an English aristocrat and Anglican cleric, who served for 45 years as Deputy Dean of Westminster.
Career
Lord John was born in 1798, the third son of Thomas Thynne, 2nd Marques ...
(1798-1881), Deputy
Dean of Westminster
The Dean of Westminster is the head of the chapter at Westminster Abbey. Due to the Abbey's status as a Royal Peculiar, the dean answers directly to the British monarch (not to the Bishop of London as ordinary, nor to the Archbishop of Canterbu ...
, 3rd son of
Thomas Thynne, 2nd Marquess of Bath
Thomas Thynne, 2nd Marquess of Bath KG (25 January 1765 – 27 March 1837), styled Viscount Weymouth from 1789 until 1796, was a British peer.
Life
Early life
Thynne was the eldest son of Thomas Thynne, 1st Marquess of Bath, and Lady Elizab ...
(1765–1837). The sons of Francis Thynne included:
*Lt Col. Algernon Carteret Thynne (1868–1917),
DSO,
Royal North Devon Hussars, of Penstowe, Kilkhampton, who was killed in action in Palestine during World War I,
and whose monument survives in Kilkhampton Church.
*Capt. George Augustus Carteret Thynne (1869-1945),
Royal North Devon Yeomanry, who had descendants surviving in 1968.
Stowe Barton
A range of stone buildings around a large courtyard, including a seven bedroom
barton house with the Grenville arms sculpted above the front door, survives, located between the site of the demolished mansion and a surviving overgrown sunken garden believed to have adjoined the Tudor mansion house. The history of this barton house is not well recorded. Harper (1910) wrote:
:All around, in the pastures of Stowe Farm, may be traced the grassy mounds and hollows that mark the foundations and the terraces of the vanished house, and the meadow immediately in front of the farmhouse is very largely pitched with a pavement of cobble-stones, a little beneath the surface. The grumbling farmer, on an evening tour of inspection of his gates, left open as a rule by trespassing Bude visitors, showed fragments of pillars and architectural carving often dug up. "Look here", he said, crossing the road and pointing to a sunken space in a field, "that is where they brought up their early vegetables".
The "Stowe Barton Farm" estate is now owned by the
National Trust
The National Trust, formally the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty, is a charity and membership organisation for heritage conservation in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. In Scotland, there is a separate and ...
and comprises 218 hectares (537 acres) of farmland and 5.77 hectares (14.25 acres) of woodland. It was offered to let by the National Trust in July 2014.
["To Let: Stowe Barton Farm, Kilkhampton, Bude, Cornwall, EX23 9JW. An extensive beef, sheep and arable farm with 7 bedroom listed farmhouse, approximately 218 hectares (537 acres) of farmland, 5.77 ha hectares (14.25 acres) of woodland, and complex of modern farm buildings. Courtyard of traditional listed buildings also available for diversification enterprises. Available as a whole let on a 10 or 20 year Farm Business Tenancy. For further details please contact: Andrew Lawes B.Sc. (Hons.) MRICS Lead Rural Surveyor, South West Region, National Trust, Bodmin Hub, Lanhydrock"]
Sources
*Beckett, Matthew
''Lost Heritage- a memorial to the lost country houses of England''
References
{{coord, 50.8729, -4.5400, type:landmark_region:GB, display=title
Country houses in Cornwall
Demolished buildings and structures in England
Grenville family