Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | ASHTEAD PARK | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 51.311910 Longitude: -0.28902321 National Grid Reference: TQ 19348 58367 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001490 Date first listed: 01-Mar-1999 |
A C17 park, developed during the C18 and C19 by successive owners.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
By the late C13 the manor of Ashtead was held by the earls of Surrey. In 1397, Richard,
Earl of Surrey and Arundel was attainted and beheaded and his estates seized by the
Crown. These were later returned to the family, eventually passing by marriage to
the Mowbrays, the dukes of Norfolk. In 1680 Sir Robert Howard, sixth son of Thomas,
first Earl of Berkshire bought the manor of Ashtead from his cousin Henry, Duke of
Norfolk, to be his chief residence. The old manor house, adjacent to St Giles' church,
was not demolished when a new house was built some 350m to the south-east. John Evelyn
(1620-1706), the diarist, who visited in 1684, writes of the 'newly built house, which
stands in a very sweet park upon the down, the avenue south though downhill to the
house, exceedingly pleased me' (de Beer 1955). Sir Robert was succeeded by his son
Thomas, who died in 1701. The estate then passed to Thomas' widow, who remarried to
become Lady Diana Feilding and lived there until her death in 1733, having restored
the estate to the Howards. The property was then owned by absentee members of the
Howard family until 1789 when Richard Bagot, who took the name of Howard, moved to
Ashtead with his wife Frances. The house was rebuilt in 1790, to a design by Joseph
Bonomi (1739-1808) executed by Samuel Wyatt (1737-1807), together with a stable block
to the west. The Howards died in 1818 and were succeeded by their daughter Mary, who
married Fulke Greville Upton, who also took the Howard name. John Loudon (1783-1843)
visited Ashtead in 1829, and described both the east garden and the kitchen garden
in the Gardener's Magazine of 1829. Following Mary's death in 1877, the estate passed
to her cousin Lieut Col Ponsonby Bagot, who in 1880 sold it to Thomas, later Sir Thomas,
Lucas, who re-routed the road that ran through the park.
In 1889 the property was bought by Pantia Ralli who was probably responsible for extending
the house to the east and west. He was responsible for the semicircular formal garden
on the north front and the removal of the east garden and continued to keep deer in
the park (JHCG 1900). On his death in 1924 the estate was put up for sale, divided
into fifty-one lots. The main house and surrounding parkland to the south of the site
was purchased by the Corporation of London for use as a boarding school, in which
use it continues (1999). The remainder of the site has been fragmented by residential
development along road frontages, but the northern part of the park remains as open
space owned by Mole Valley District Council.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Ashtead Park lies on the south side
of the A24, 2km south-west of Epsom. The site is 54ha in area, of which c 2ha is formal
gardens and pleasure grounds, surrounded by a park of which c 30ha is wooded. The
site is at its lowest at its most northerly point, and rises gradually over the whole
of its length, so that its southern point is just below the ridge of the Epsom Downs.
The southern half of the site is enclosed by a 2m high brick wall along its boundary
with Farm Lane which runs south-east along the east boundary, and Park Lane which
runs south-west and then north-west to enclose the southern end of the site. The north-west
boundary to Epsom Road is a post and wire fence and the boundary to the north-east
is formed by the gardens of residential properties along the west side of Farm Lane.
The small residential development to the north of Rookery Hill is excluded from the
site here registered.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The park is bisected by Rookery Hill, a public road which
crosses between Park Lane on the west and Farm Lane on the east, with a lodge at each
end. The single-storey East Lodge was built before 1880 (Sale particulars), and the
two-storey West Lodge (outside the area here registered) was built for Ralli c 1890.
Two sets of gate piers and gates (listed grade II; outside the area here registered)
grace the western entrance to Rookery Hill and the drive to St Giles' church. The
east end of Rookery Hill is closed by mid C19 iron gates hung on ashlar piers (listed
grade II) immediately north of the Lodge. The carriage entrance has a wide single
gate hung on the south pier, with the pedestrian entrance to the north. At the centre
of Rookery Hill a drive runs south to the main house, now the City of London Freemen's
School; St Giles' church is on the west, and south of the church are modern school
buildings. The drive continues south past the western service wing of the main house
and swings round to a turning circle below the south front, in the centre of which
is a stone sundial (late C19, listed grade II).
From Rookery Hill, a track runs north joining the A24 adjacent to North Lodge (illustrated
in the Sale particulars, 1880) via the impressive northern gateway (listed grade II)
standing c 1.1km north of the house. Built of Portland stone and wrought iron, the
gateway has recently (late C20) been restored. Gate piers c 4m high support large
wrought-iron gates which incorporate the date 1882. Pedestrian access is via a similar,
but simpler gate to the west which is matched by a screen to the east.
John Evelyn writes of approaching the house from the south (de Beer 1955), and Rocque's
map (1768) indicates access via an avenue from the south. The Wyburd Survey of 1802
(reproduced in A History of Ashtead, 1995) also shows only a southern access but an
1802 'Survey of roads proposed to be altered' indicates a road running east/west across
the park, from the gardener's house on the east (now the Headmaster's House) to the
south of St Giles' churchyard. A footpath on the line of the present Rookery Hill
is annotated 'to be done away'. At the south-east corner of the park stands an elaborate
entrance, the William III gateway, with urns on brick gate piers. Built for Sir Robert
Howard in the late C17, this gave access to Epsom racecourse c 1.5km to the east.
The south-east drive to the house through the gateway appears on the OS map of 1871,
as does the drive from the north of the park.
PRINCIPAL BUILDINGS Ashtead Park House (1790, listed grade II*) stands in the centre
of the southern half of Ashtead Park, the main entrance protected by an early example
of a porte-cochre with Tuscan columns (Pevsner et al 1971). The house is of yellow
stock brick with Portland stone dressings and is three storeys high, its flat roof
concealed by a balustraded parapet with corner urns. The plan is rectangular, on an
east/west axis with single-storey pavilions at each end, the eastern end built as
a conservatory and a service wing attached to the western pavilion which was formerly
the billiard room. Balustrades protect the basement area to the front and rear of
the house and define the semicircular formal garden to the north and the turning circle
to the south. The two-storey rectangular stable block, built c 1790, stands c 100m
west of the house; it is now classrooms.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS To the north of the house is a formal garden, created
by Pantia Ralli c 1900 by adding a lower gravel walk to the north of the existing
terrace and enclosing the area within a semicircular balustrade (listed grade II).
The garden is now (late C20) lawn with green and gold yews clipped in a variety of
shapes, including balls and two large baskets. An elaborate stone surround in the
centre of the garden contains smaller topiary balls and seasonal bedding and may at
one time have held water.
East of the house is a sunken lawn area, now used for cricket nets, beyond which is
a group of mature cedars and rhododendrons fronting woodland. In 1829 (Gardener's
Mag) Loudon described the geometrical garden surrounded by a gravel walk which lay
below the east front, the article including a diagram of the central section and a
list of plants. By 1849, the east flower garden had been extended southwards, as described
in Keane's Beauties of Surrey (1849). It included a rosery with a sundial and was
screened by rhododendrons. Pantia Ralli removed the east garden c 1900 when a conservatory
was added to the east end of the house. In 1914 Gardeners' Chronicle noted than an
area of c 150 acres (62.5ha) was 'devoted to gardens and pleasure grounds'.
A rectangular garden planted with herbs and enclosed by yew hedges lies c 80m to the
north-east of the house; beyond to the north and north-east is an area of shrubs and
trees, with the remains of meandering paths, all that remains of Ralli's Wild Garden
described in the Gardeners' Chronicle of 1914 .
On the west side of the house and service accommodation, a footpath runs north-west
towards St Giles' church, flanked by pleached limes. This avenue is credited to Sir
Robert Howard and appears on a survey plan of c 1706. The traveller and diarist Celia
Fiennes also visited at this time, and although her description is mainly about the
house she also mentions 'severall courts at the entrance', 'the hall which opens to
the garden', and 'severall gardens walled in' (Morris 1952). To the east of the house,
a large building which contains an indoor swimming pool screens views of the house
from the north. Most of the school buildings, including the converted stable block,
lie in the area to the west of the house and south of the church.
PARK The parkland lies to the north and south of the house, and in both directions
the landform has been altered to create level sports pitches. Beyond the pitches,
c 150m to the south of the house, a lime avenue has been planted to replace trees
felled in the storm of 1987. An avenue appears on Rocque's map of 1768 extending south
outside the walled park, beyond Park Lane. The line of this avenue can still be traced,
extending to Shepherd's Walk (outside the area here registered). Paths lead through
the woodland (replanted late C20) to the east and west of the avenue and around the
south and east of the park. Within the wood, south-east of the house, lies the school
sports complex. A soil bund inside the eastern boundary wall has been planted with
trees as screening for nearby properties.
North of the house the ground level has also been altered to provide sports pitches,
with a few specimen trees remaining. The old manor house, which abutted the east wall
of the churchyard, continued in use as a dairy and was not demolished until after
the end of the C18. There was also a Well House, an important feature since John Evelyn's
one fault with Ashtead Park was 'that there is no water but what is drawn up by horses
from a very deep well' (de Beer 1955). The Well House was demolished in 1997, but
the two wells and connecting tunnel were incorporated in the new Science Building
in 1998..
To the south of Rookery Hill the school grounds are edged with white parkland fencing.
West of the junction with the school drive, Rookery Hill passes over an ornamental
bridge (listed grade II) with balustraded parapets, constructed for Thomas Lucas c
1880 over a shallow dry valley. North of the road, the parkland is managed as a nature
reserve containing a mix of scrubby woodland and open grassy glades with some mature
pollard trees. In the north of the park is a detached dwelling, 'The Cottage in the
Park'. There are also two ponds; the southern one, Island Pond, may have been dug
for Sir Robert Howard as an item in the Ashtead Park accounts for the early C18 refers
to 'clearing the Island Pond of mud'. Swete's Handbook of Epsom published in 1860
comments that 'This demesne has ever been celebrated for the abundance and quality
of its deer, who gather in large herds around the lake and give life and animation
to the scene'. The northern pond, which has a more irregular shape, was created for
Pantia Ralli and is edged with remnants of the ornamental planting described in the
Journal of Horticulture and Cottage Gardening in 1900. At the south-west corner of
the pond are the remains of a brick-built boathouse.
A park was inclosed at Ashtead before 1650, when it was included in a conveyance of
the manor; it remained a deer park into the C20 (JHCG 1900).
KITCHEN GARDEN The rectangular, brick-walled kitchen garden is situated c 300m north
of the house, to the north of Rookery Hill. Attached to the south side of the south
wall is the former gardener's house (listed grade II), dated 1734 on a sundial on
the front elevation. To the east of the house, and on the line of its rear wall, is
a south-facing greenhouse, and on the lawn south of the greenhouse is a mulberry tree.
Inside the walled garden the remains of a row of cordon apples run parallel with the
rear of the house, and on the north wall are glasshouses (now, 1999, derelict). A
doorway in the north wall leads to an area which contains the vacant Bothy and one
free-standing greenhouse. A further brick-walled enclosure (late C18, listed grade
II) to the north-east is now (1999) leased to an adjacent nursery business. Loudon,
on his visit in 1829, praised the kitchen gardens which he thought the best he had
seen on that tour of Surrey and Sussex. He makes mention of the stove houses and their
pineapples, the melon grounds, vineries, fruit trees against the walls, and the abundant
flower borders providing cut flowers for the house (Gardener's Mag 1829).
REFERENCES
Gardener's Magazine, (October 1829), p 525 W Keane, Beauties of Surrey (1849) C Swete,
Handbook of Epsom (1860), p 119 J Horticulture and Cottage Gardening, (22 February
1900), pp 160-2 Victoria History of the County of Surrey 3, (1902?12), pp 247-9 Gardeners'
Chronicle, (24 October 1914) C Morris (ed), The Illustrated Journeys of Celia Fiennes
1685-1712 (1952), p 23 E S de Beer (ed), The Diary of John Evelyn 4, (1955), p 376
N Pevsner et al, The Buildings of England: Surrey (1971), pp 98-100 Proc Leatherhead
District Local Hist Soc 4, no 2 (1978) Leatherhead and District Local History Society,
A History of Ashtead Park (1995)
Maps Survey of Ashtead Manor, c 1706 (copy held by Leatherhead and District Local
History Society; location of original unknown) J Rocque, Map of the County of Surrey,
surveyed c 1762, published 1768 Survey of roads proposed to be altered from Epsom
to Ashtead, 1802 (203/17/1), (Surrey County Record Office) Wyburd Survey, 1802 [reproduced
in A History of Ashtead Park (1995)]
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1866?9, published 1871 2nd edition revised 1894,
published 1897 3rd edition published 1915 1932 edition OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition
published 1866
Archival items Ashtead Park Accounts (particularly 1704?10) (G1/53/4ff), (Surrey History
Centre) Sale particulars, 1880 (Guildhall Library)
Description written: March 1999 Amended: June 2003 Register Inspector: BJL Edited:
June 2002
This garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by Historic England for its special historic interest.