Identification and description | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | LEXHAM HALL | ||||||||||||
Location |
|
||||||||||||
Localisation | Latitude: 52.719752 Longitude: 0.76251436 National Grid Reference: TF 86675 17146 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
||||||||||||
label.localisation | [52.7242679325477,0.768608866449574], [52.7240066129353,0.769457164561333], [52.723718740281,0.770381302753151], [52.7235313775016,0.770979306919222], [52.7233745052328,0.771491547133723], [52.7232219022826,0.771979558090713], [52.7231310959952,0.772261400886541], [52.7230159807135,0.772629421997804], [52.7228973053362,0.773149154990803], [52.7228712334111,0.773310680758518], [52.7225484596771,0.773189674781223], [52.7222942610043,0.773092528165109], [52.722291076941,0.772963818202691], [52.7222856615977,0.772877812451047], [52.7222684927518,0.772764535778655], [52.7221956019983,0.772386635077261], [52.7220697228386,0.7716790332412], [52.7220003930098,0.771254458554092], [52.7219259236405,0.77083771963279], [52.7217448486993,0.770848673250259], [52.7213284850726,0.770858981953829], [52.7207025056803,0.770882506694115], [52.7199862592605,0.770900321524622], [52.7199205692423,0.770902271989264], [52.7196080844079,0.770919167886566], [52.7191818734563,0.77092680804112], [52.7189613227365,0.770931185242805], [52.7186698578699,0.770949413773879], [52.7183614146638,0.770952289748727], [52.718379851587,0.770683730651587], [52.7183464318507,0.770639287945071], [52.7183526155522,0.770615956320245], [52.7183554765011,0.770570511689443], [52.7183936728891,0.770526033904775], [52.7183980101059,0.770497061450903], [52.7184673168338,0.769653692396369], [52.7185578700895,0.768643512114029], [52.7185701642456,0.768379389563001], [52.7185779161202,0.767994404987009], [52.7186000341894,0.767100444897652], [52.7186109228554,0.766634076308246], [52.7183229735138,0.766607685368557], [52.7180959002871,0.766572917046028], [52.7178698376707,0.766548401405276], [52.717610523934,0.766515679879144], [52.7175988252451,0.766486388309698], [52.7175771842678,0.7664584961133], [52.7174425294347,0.766390826187193], [52.7172138960632,0.766264178419792], [52.7172031454068,0.766300207961328], [52.7171880174825,0.766311496864522], [52.7171524403689,0.766296998137884], [52.7171275690153,0.766301554389099], [52.7170925655047,0.766315642599064], [52.7170691621203,0.766310088744014], [52.7169879862619,0.766263545833316], [52.7169349351373,0.766224084846208], [52.71691772142,0.766271951526505], [52.7168873292477,0.766247593028662], [52.7169033038329,0.766199647933662], [52.7161989375867,0.765814475860363], [52.7156909945619,0.765506590280086], [52.7153588230729,0.765302441872905], [52.7149119617771,0.765027411651487], [52.714893131202,0.764985425189884], [52.7149252462899,0.763767928834186], [52.7150161463186,0.760930782118378], [52.7150547529725,0.759898416075312], [52.7150573683103,0.759852529409552], [52.7150714399271,0.759780001558106], [52.7152427577821,0.759017885874737], [52.7153248224601,0.758684531719256], [52.7155396200189,0.758714409168811], [52.7158795588431,0.758760745809228], [52.716268032202,0.758816233367847], [52.7168289051025,0.758894985792289], [52.7171062252236,0.758929553327767], [52.7171854176913,0.758879480741339], [52.7172570867953,0.758886049006272], [52.717295861094,0.758923163584088], [52.7174602850054,0.758935588068885], [52.7175858077861,0.758970035155314], [52.7177064780235,0.759000088950064], [52.7179208068058,0.758988683485622], [52.718057350936,0.758983488151619], [52.7182226757062,0.758957215619022], [52.7184151063635,0.758883696382502], [52.7185961742118,0.758819677237517], [52.7187236884284,0.758768581152067], [52.7188028808733,0.758718506470652], [52.7189062735923,0.758639378924825], [52.7189828476872,0.758542238453915], [52.7191969982846,0.758280412701447], [52.7193919899538,0.758043898374509], [52.7195246939873,0.757877585457591], [52.7195951092631,0.757777284295901], [52.7198137253746,0.757459117224917], [52.7199645608861,0.757248969229386], [52.7200013620529,0.757204716088086], [52.7200486232519,0.757164632723262], [52.7200757158463,0.757138796856594], [52.7201614048527,0.757109772081396], [52.7202213577243,0.75710896417684], [52.7202541079537,0.756420096770924], [52.7202529245847,0.755811724862411], [52.7202419791279,0.755563139568905], [52.7202334030879,0.755452416665079], [52.7202005272612,0.755367706979107], [52.7201421882743,0.755359437186326], [52.7201155099675,0.755247573101494], [52.7201047299,0.75505177978896], [52.720085033456,0.754579970288702], [52.7200551085686,0.754008812142025], [52.7200970656065,0.754002289652776], [52.720042055171,0.753675860168094], [52.7198453804258,0.753557179349269], [52.7198568176554,0.753286297877141], [52.7198805526105,0.753277604612891], [52.7198675936925,0.753142171626867], [52.7198397535349,0.752954812832434], [52.71998545625,0.753080245928404], [52.720114822221,0.75310880430248], [52.7203468387714,0.753143815950764], [52.7206996907684,0.752189062017308], [52.720718573254,0.752229008057728], [52.7207847932865,0.752257644686668], [52.7208846253166,0.752278209642867], [52.7209291913023,0.752278987963666], [52.7210572799469,0.752256459591695], [52.721057341724,0.752200364412328], [52.7210239285968,0.752039174186857], [52.7210585614096,0.752041355564116], [52.7210825806944,0.752073465301456], [52.7212876268467,0.752096584478454], [52.7216508163414,0.752082747482893], [52.7220486386239,0.752071091846327], [52.722095721603,0.7520699699685], [52.7222850611412,0.753089516665655], [52.7224719138247,0.754108900906474], [52.7225437984324,0.754473394165657], [52.7227411012633,0.755528194713111], [52.7228962207769,0.75640282698683], [52.7230533030955,0.757227604504592], [52.7231580759149,0.757806417154063], [52.7232361675598,0.758203941893976], [52.7232590970954,0.758229871166595], [52.7233017602161,0.758259090113216], [52.723612174286,0.758384746425071], [52.7240576558278,0.758559751224564], [52.7242184254505,0.758622925193896], [52.7243029010338,0.758664975337685], [52.7245485251173,0.758753917848571], [52.724602991879,0.758779025694414], [52.7250244560821,0.758951248373048], [52.7249340902628,0.75964112649191], [52.7247930804135,0.760750048302339], [52.7246904366149,0.761541116735625], [52.7245939687991,0.762279563781488], [52.7245265419014,0.762781166715534], [52.7244673454817,0.763248631284527], [52.7243875018315,0.763857565169566], [52.7242485618377,0.764899572632284], [52.7241266241798,0.765803340046509], [52.7250778778998,0.766010431005621], [52.7249227797942,0.766500380079148], [52.7247820920677,0.766956536304932], [52.7246093479455,0.767512676724171], [52.7244461137852,0.768032684453057], [52.7242679325477,0.768608866449574] | ||||||||||||
Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1000268 Date first listed: 18-Sep-1987 |
A late C20 formal garden by Dame Sylvia Crowe, surrounded by C18 parkland, further
expanded during the C 19.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
The first manor house at Lexham was built in the 1630s for John Wright and was acquired
by the Wodehouse family of Kimberley Hall (qv) in 1673, together with the surrounding
estate. During the early C 18 Edward Wodehouse extensively remodelled the house and
built a walled kitchen garden, part of which survives. In 1776 Sir John Wodehouse
carried out further improvements to the Hall, enclosed and laid out the park, and
developed gardens and pleasure grounds to the south. John Hyde leased the estate from
1795 and eventually purchased it in 1801, selling on to Colonel F W Keppel in 1807
who extended the park and commissioned Jeffry Wyatville to enlarge the Hall. During
the latter part of the C19 the park was further altered, expanding slightly to the
east (OS 1891). In 1911 the estate was sold to the Jessop family who developed the
farming side of the estate and in 1941 sold it to Olaf Kier, a Dane who intended to
settle at Lexham after the war. During the war the house and park were occupied by
the army; park trees were lost, the gardens suffered extensive damage and the Hall
fell into disrepair. Consequently Kier put the estate back on the market and it was
purchased by William Foster in 1946 who restored the house with the help of architect
Jim Fletcher Watson. The site remains (1999) in private ownership.
SITE DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Lexham Hall stands on the eastern boundary
of the village of East Lexham, c24 km east of Kings Lynn and covers an area of approximately
65ha. Lexham lies in a rural part of Norfolk, set in a gently rolling landscape of
farmland and woodland. The park is bounded to the north by farmland, with a minor
country road linking East and West Lexham cutting off Great Wood and the Three-cornered
Plantation from the main body of the park. To the east and south the boundaries are
formed by farmland, while East Lexham village lies outside the park, adjacent to the
western boundary. The whole site is surrounded by agricultural land. The land falls
slightly to the Broad Water which runs north-south through the eastern side of the
park, and there is a further gentle fall to the south towards the River Nar which
cuts east-west through the southern tip.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The present drive (1999) enters directly off the East to
West Lexham road to the north-west of the Hall and runs due south before turning east,
past the north front to the main entrance on the east front of the Hall which looks
out over the park and the Broad Water to the perimeter plantations. This drive was
created by the army during the second world war and was retained by William Foster
who planted a lime avenue along its straight length. A second drive, now a grass track,
leads west to the village and leaves the park through the boundary plantation beside
the West Lodge, a single storey rough cast brick and slate cottage with decorative
chimneys and barge boards erected during the 1850s. The chimneys were made by a local
brickworks to an original design by A W N Pugin for Oxburgh Hall (qv). The present
main drive replaced the mid C19 east drive which entered the park by a lodge (now
demolished) in Gardener's Plantation, crossed a bridge over the Broad Water and swept
south-west through the park to the north front (OS 1891).
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Lexham Hall (listed grade II) is a large colour washed brick and
slate mansion. The north (originally the entrance) front is two-storey with seven
bays and a porch over the centre bay, and five flat-roofed dormers. The present entrance
is at the centre of the east side. The south (garden) front has eight bays and four
gabled dormers with a fine view from the south terrace, looking south over the river
and then through a cutting in the American Garden to the landscape beyond. To the
west is a range of service buildings, including the c1850 octagonal former dairy (listed
grade II) built of flint with gault brick dressing under a copper roof and a range
of stables and garages. The fabric of the 1630s manor house at Lexham was incorporated
in the building of a new mansion in c1700 by Edward Wodehouse, the wing at the east
end of the south side surviving from this phase. During the early C 19 Sir Jeffry
Wyatville was commissioned to enlarge the Hall and the whole was substantially restored
and remodelled by Jim Fletcher Watson in 1948 for William Foster.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens cover approximately 2.Sha and lie principally
to the south and south-west of the house. To the north is a gravel carriage drive
set in grass lawns which sweeps round to the east front and circles a central grass
area. The east front is bordered by balustrading added in 1949, broken in the centre
of the east wall by a pair of wrought iron gates leading into the park and in the
centre of the south wall by a gap leading onto the garden terraces. The C20 balustrading
marks the extent of the C19 formal garden but otherwise nothing visible remains of
the C 18 and C 19 gardens on these fronts.
To the south is the main garden, designed by Dame Sylvia Crowe and planted by Mrs
William Foster during the 1950s. Two levels of shallow paved terraces, decorated with
balustrading, come off the Hall front and lead down to a lawn enclosed by high yew
hedges clipped as scrolls. A new scheme of rose planting (1999) designed by Peter
Beales fills the border below the bottom terrace. Beyond the yew hedges is the park.
To the west the lawn leads to a long walk bordered by yew on the park side and by
a deep border of mixed shrubs and herbaceous perennials on the north side. The walk
leads to the east wall of the walled kitchen garden 80m west of the house and also
links the gardens to the pleasure grounds, known as the American Gardens. East of
the gateway into the walled gardens is a flint and brick loggia, built in the 1950s
using materials from the demolished East Lodge.
The American Gardens cover c 12ha and run south from below the kitchen garden, along
the western boundary, over the river before curving round to form the southern boundary
of the park. This pleasure ground is a woodland garden of mixed exotics and hardwoods,
underplanted with a variety of evergreen shrubs. Paths wind through the area and flint
and brick bridges, built by Mr William Foster in the mid C20, cross the river beside
weirs. The gardens contain two Gothic style brick and thatch summerhouses, one in
the western section which has been restored and stands beside the remains of a fountain
pond, the other in the southern section which is derelict (1999). The summerhouses
both date from the mid 1850s. A vista has been cut through the southern section of
the Gardens, aligned on the house terrace, to allow views out of the site to the south.
The American Gardens were created in the early years of the C 19 and developed by
Mrs Frances Keppel in the 1840s with plants supplied by the Royal Botanic Gardens,
Kew (qv) (Kelly 1985)."
THE PARK The park is laid to pasture with a generous scatter of trees, predominantly
oak with lime and sweet chestnut of mixed ages. Some very mature oaks in the north
park are most probably pre-park boundary trees. The River Nar cuts through the south
park from east to west and broadens at the western end in two sections to create a
lake. Running north from the lake, c200m from the house, is the Broad Water, a canalised
spur off the river which runs for 800m through the park and crosses the East to West
Lexham road into a small section of open parkbeyond.
The park was laid out in the 1770s by Sir John Wodehouse, possibly influenced by Lancelot
Brown (1716-83) whom he employed at Kimberley the following year. At that time it
extended north to the road and was enclosed by Great Wood and Three-cornered Plantation
(Faden's map 1797). Gardener's Plantation was added in the mid C19 by the Keppel family
who also created the Broad Water and extended the park beyond the river to the south,
with the planting of the American Gardens. Further expansion took place at the end
of the C 19, adding parkland to the east between Gardener's Plantation and Carr Plantation.
William Foster restored the park, created the lake and built the lake bridge in the
mid C20. During the C20 the level of tree cover has been much reduced by storm damage
but the park, particularly to the north remains well treed and restoration planting
has taken place in the late C20. During the 1980s the eastern park was returned to
pasture by Mr Neil Foster.
THE KITCHEN GARDEN The walled kitchen garden covers approximately lha and lies 120m
south-west of the house. The area is walled on three sides and is open to the south
where it is bounded by a moat, the crinkle crankle brick north wall (listed grade
II) is the oldest, being possibly C17 (Tom Williamson pers comm 1999). The flint and
brick east wall is C18 and has an ornamental gateway with urn-topped brick piers leading
from the gardens. The west wall is a mix of C 19 and C20, the C 19 section forming
a division beyond which lies a late C20 swimming pool. The garden is laid in a quartered
pattern, planted for ornament in the southern half with grass, roses, herbaceous planting
and urns, while the northern half is given over to fruit and vegetables. It contains
some C19 and C20 glass and the remains of C19 melon frames.
REFERENCES N Pevsner, TheBuildings of England: North-west and South Norfolk (1962),
p147 J Kenworthy-Browne et al, Burke's and Savills Guide to Country Houses III (1981),
p153 G I Kelly, Lexham Hall - a history based upon manuscript sources, 1985 (private
report for Mr W Foster) [copy on EH file] The Field (29 Mar 1986), pp 50-53 Lexham
Hall, (UEA report 1992) T Williamson, The archaeology of the landscape park, BAR Brit
Ser 268, (1998), pp 260-261
Maps W Faden, A new topographical map of the county of Norfolk, 1797 (Norfolk Record
Office) A Bryant, Map of the county of Norfolk, 1826 (Norfolk Record Office) Tithe
award map for Lexham parish, 1841 (Norfolk Record Office) OS 6"" to 1 mile lst edition
published 1891 2nd edition published 1906 1950 edition OS 25"" to I mile 2nd edition
published 1905
Archive items Sale Particulars, 1911 (BRA 983/41 5286 A), (Norfolk Record Office)
Description written: March 1999 HJ comments: June 1999 Owner's comments: October 2000
Edited: March 2001 Register Inspector: EMP
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.