Identification and description | |||||
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Name | RISBY HALL | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 53.802888 Longitude: -0.46852593 National Grid Reference: TA 00958 35153 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001419 Date first listed: 12-Mar-1999 |
Formal gardens probably of late C17 date which survive in the form of earthworks;
formal canals and walkways probably of similar date, and pleasure grounds with lakes
probably of late C18 date.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
The site was owned by the Ellerker family from 1401 to 1655, when it passed through
marriage to James Bradshaw, who built a new house on a new site and laid out gardens.
In the late 1760s Eaton Mainwaring Ellerker made plans to alter the grounds, and probably
created lakes in the valley. The whole estate was sold in 1787, passing in the 1880s
to Charles Wilson, Lord Nunburnholme and subsequently to other private owners. It
remains (1998) in private ownership.
An undated view, probably of early C18 date, shows the Hall and gardens from the south.
The site is a scheduled ancient monument.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Risby Hall lies c 2km south-west of
Beverley on land which slopes down to a valley to the south, in a setting which is
rural and agricultural. The c 30ha site is bounded on the north-west side by a sunk
fence, thought to be the remains of a park pale which formed part of the southern
boundary of a deer park of c 1550. A C20 fence divides woodland from arable land on
the north side of the site. The south boundary is formed by Dunflat Road, and by the
outer precincts of Risby Park Farm. The east boundary is formed by a track which runs
north from Dunflat Road, while the south-west and west boundary is formed by fencing.
The fragmentary earthwork remains of the deserted medieval village of Risby lie on
the north-facing side of the valley.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The entrance to the site is from Dunflat Road from which
a track runs north, crossing the bottom of the valley, continuing to the northern
boundary. A hollow-way connects this drive with Risby Farm. The C18 view shows the
drive running north from the valley bottom and running to the rear (north side) of
the house. A drive aligned with the house site and running northwards towards Cellar
Heads (see below) is visible in soil marks in the field north of the site and outside
the registered area. There are various secondary entrances from tracks and paths.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Risby Hall was built c 1680 by James Bradshaw to replace an earlier
manor house, which was probably on a moated site c 450m to the north and outside the
registered area, called Cellar Heads (scheduled ancient monument). The early C18 view
shows a symmetrical classical facade with a central entrance. The house was seriously
damaged by fire in the late C18 and subsequently demolished, leaving the house platform
which is sited at the top of the north side of the valley. A building sited c 150m
north-west of the house platform, which was demolished in the 1980s, had a date stone
of 1760, and may have been a replacement for the house.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS Immediately south of the house platform there is a raised
terrace, with views over the valley to the south, overlooking a level platform. A
pyramidal earthwork lies at each of the south-east and south-west corners of the platform,
and between them there is a ramped slope. Another level platform lies at the base
of the slope. To the south in the valley bottom there is an elongated pond with an
irregular semicircular projection on its south side which has traces of brickwork
footings around the edge.
This arrangement conforms with the gardens on the C18 view which shows the terraced
walk in front of the house overlooking a parterre with statuary, with garden pavilions
on top of pyramidal platforms on each side. At the base of the slope the lower platform
has paired parterres with geometric patterns delineated by low hedges, and at the
southernmost part of the garden is a canal with a semicircular bow. Walls surround
the garden and there is a semicircular wall surmounted by railings with a central
entrance in front of the canal. A dovecote is shown outside the garden walls south-west
of the house.
To the east of the garden site there is woodland, Yewtree Plantation immediately east
of the gardens and Blackdike Plantation to the north-east. Aligned with the raised
terrace, c 40m east of the house site, there is a linear canal with a line of yew
trees along its southern bank. A line of trees in approximately this position is shown
on the C18 view. Immediately north of this is a smaller pond, and at its east end
there is a roughly circular depression which may have been another pond. To the north-east,
c 80m from the house platform and running north/south for a distance of c 180m, is
another canal, Black Dike, which has a raised bank, possibly a former walkway, running
along its east side. To the west there are the remains of ponds which are shown as
three canals oriented north/south on the 1855 OS map.
Paths lead east and south-east through the Blackdike and Yew Tree Plantations, down
the valley side. In the bottom of the valley there are three small lakes. The western
and middle lakes are overlooked by the wooded slopes of Gorse Plantation on the north
side, and by open land to the south. The middle lake is not shown on the 1855 OS map
and has been reflooded in the late C20. The eastern lake is surrounded by woodland
called Fishpond Wood and Folly Wood. On the south shore, c 700m east of the house
site, there is a platform overlooking the water, with a gothick folly, possibly of
late C18 or early C19 date. The folly is arcaded and has the remains of a fireplace
within it.
The valley immediately south and south-west of the house has a flat bottom, suggesting
that the lakes may have extended, or may have been intended to extend, in front of
the house.
The lakes were probably created by Easton Mainwaring Ellerker during the period 1769
to his death in 1771. An account by Arthur Young, who visited Risby in 1769, states:
'the valley ... is to be floated with water, and will then have the appearance of
a very noble irregular lake, winding both to the right and the left into a wood.'
Young also mentions plans for a 'Grecian temple' amongst the trees. The account makes
it plain that Ellerker planned to remove the garden walls to throw the park and garden
together. It is possible that he erected the gothick folly in place of the proposed
Greek temple.
KITCHEN GARDEN The C18 print shows walled orchards and gardens running down the slope
immediately to the east of the gardens in front of the house, but little trace of
these appears to survive.
REFERENCES
A Young, A Six Months Tour Through the North of England 1, (1769), p 243 The Victoria
History of the County of York East Riding 4, (1979), p 147 Georgian Society for East
Yorkshire Newsletter, No 6 (1980) D Neave and E Waterson, Lost Houses of East Yorkshire
(1988), pp 50(2 D Neave and D Turnbull, The Landscaped Parks and Gardens of East Yorkshire
(1992), pp 55-7
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1855 OS 25" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published
1910
Archival items View of Risby Hall and gardens from the south, nd (early C18), (Gott
Collection 6/99), (Wakefield Museum)
Description written: April 1998 Amended: April 1999 Register Inspector: CEH Edited:
November 1999
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.