Identification and description | |||||||||
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Name | CHANTMARLE | ||||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 50.817512 Longitude: -2.5858697 National Grid Reference: ST5882402160 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1000477 Date first listed: 19-Dec-1986 Date of most recent amendment: 14-Jul-2016 Location Description:Chantmarle Manor, Dorchester, Dorset |
The house at Chantmarle belonged to the Cheveral family in the late medieval period,
before being sold in 1606 to Sir John Strode, younger son of John Strode of Parnham,
Dorset. Sir John was a wealthy lawyer and proceeded to build a new house, retaining
a portion of the existing house which is believed to date from the C15. The construction
of this new E-plan house, which was begun in 1612 and retained a portion of the existing
house, was described by Sir John in an account book which shows it to have cost £1,142.
In 1628, Sir John inherited Parnham from his brother, and thereafter Chantmarle became
a secondary residence.
During the C18 and C19, Chantmarle was used as a tenanted farmhouse, and a drawing
by JC Buckler of 1828 shows one wing partly ruinous. In 1898, the estate was sold
to the Earl of Ilchester, before being sold again in 1907 to Francis Savile who repaired
and restored the house, and commissioned Inigo Thomas to design new formal gardens.
In 1919 Chantmarle was sold again to CH St John Hornby, who employed the architect
Edward Warren to make alterations to the house and gardens. In April 1950 Chantmarle
was sold to the Ministry of Works for use by the Home Office as a police training
centre and a number of new buildings were constructed to the west of the house. It
continued in institutional use until c.2000, when it passed into private ownership.
The First Edition Ordnance Survey map of 1888 and the Second Edition from 1903 show
a series of enclosures or terraces to the east and south of the house which correspond
to the areas developed as formal gardens by Thomas. These may represent the remnants
of C17 gardens associated with Sir John Strode's early-C17 house. A ditch or stream
on the eastern side of these enclosures was developed by Thomas as the canal, which
was intended to recall the moat which Sir John Strode recorded as 'some time invironing
the house'.
Early-C20 formal gardens designed by Francis Inigo Thomas for Francis Savile, perhaps
incorporating elements of an early-C17 formal garden, and extended c.1920 by Edward
Warren.
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING: Chantmarle is situated c.1km west of
Frome St Quintin. The c.4ha site is adjoined to the south by agricultural land, while
to the north-west it is bounded by mid-to-late-C20 institutional buildings constructed
for the police training centre. To the east the railway line from Weymouth to Yeovil
bounds the garden. The site slopes from west to east, sloping down to the River Frome
which crosses the north-eastern corner of the site, and flows on the eastern side
of the railway. There are easterly views from the gardens across the valley of the
River Frome towards Frome St Quintin.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES: Chantmarle is approached from a minor road, Chantmarle Lane,
which leads west from Frome St Quintin. The main approach begins c.500m east of the
house, through a pair of thatched cottages designed c.1920 by Alfred Powell for CH
St John Hornby. The approach lane is then carried over the railway line by a bridge
with an ornamental stone balustrade built c.1910 by Inigo Thomas for Francis Savile.
Chantmarle Lane continues c.80m west before arriving at the entrance gates north-east
of the house. The forecourt is separated from the lane by an early-C20 stone wall
surmounted by balustrades. Similar quadrant walls flank a pair of tall stone piers
surmounted by obelisk finials, which support a pair of tall wrought-iron gates.
Opposite the entrance to the forecourt, an avenue leads north for c.100m. This area
has been partly developed as a car park in the late C20.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING: Chantmarle (listed Grade I) stands on a level terrace towards
the centre of the site. The house is irregular in plan and is constructed in ashlar
Ham stone, knapped flint and banded stone under slate roofs. It comprises two storeys
and an attic. The principal range faces east and forms the house built by Sir John
Strode in 1612. The entrance façade has a central, full-height gabled porch with a
first-floor oriel, with stone mullion and transom windows across the elevation.
Originally E-shaped on plan, this range lost the projecting north-east and south-east
wings in the early C19. A lower range projects to the south of the principal range,
with a further range, comprising part of the C15 house, extending north-west from
the C17 house.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS: The formal gardens are situated to the south and east
of the house, with a further area lying between the east and north-west ranges of
the house. Beyond these are areas of meadow and glade, with a tree belt to the west.
The forecourt to the east of the house is integral to the garden scheme, and consists
of a carriage turning area surrounded by panels of lawn. To the east the court is
enclosed by stone balustrades. The balustrade breaks forward in a semi-circular balcony
on an axis with the three-story porch of the house, supported on corbels which match
those of the oriel window above the entrance door. The balcony is framed by obelisks
and Irish yews, and overlooks a long, narrow canal which is bounded on its western
side by the stone walls enclosing the gardens around the house, and on its eastern
side by a grass terrace walk and a row of yew hedges. The grass walk is approached
by a flight of stone steps at the north-eastern corner of the forecourt. A pair of
stone piers with ball finials in the yew hedge continues the axis from the balcony
and porch, and frames the vista to an area of meadow below which is approached down
a flight of semi-circular stone steps which descends between the stone piers. In the
meadow there are several streams and a small pond with a cascade at its northern end.
The southern side of the forecourt is enclosed by a stone wall in which is set an
arched doorway with a wrought-iron gate leading to the south garden. This approximately
square area is laid out with four panels of lawn and a central, circular pool enclosed
by stone balustrades. The lawns are separated by gravel walks, while a stone-flagged
walk extends along the northern side of the garden, separating the lawns from a herbaceous
border. The north-south axis through the garden extends from the forecourt gateway
to a balustraded stone bridge, which crosses a stream on the southern side of the
garden with an area of bog and rock garden, beyond which is an area of meadow. There
is a further east-west axis through the garden, terminated to the east by a stone
bench flanked by obelisks, with a shell-headed niche in the retaining wall behind.
The walk leading west from here is flanked by Irish yews, and was originally terminated
to the west by a flight of stone steps ascending to a croquet lawn. A later flight
of steps and a gate with the date 1920 extend the vista westwards, in a wall built
on a further terrace above the croquet lawn.
The croquet lawn is retained above the level of the south garden by a buttressed stone
wall surmounted by a balustrade, with low yew hedges enclosing the croquet lawn itself.
These hedges have openings at the central point of each side leading to a perimeter
grass walk. The further terrace to the west is planted with a single row of mature
pines which form a visual backdrop to the garden terraces. At the southern end of
this terrace is a single-storey summerhouse, while a flight of steps to the north-east
descends to a stone-flagged walk which extends between yew hedges on the northern
side of the croquet lawn. This walk provides access to the courtyard garden to the
west of the house, through an opening in the stone wall adjacent to the walk.
The courtyard garden is an irregular-shaped area enclosed to the east and south-east
by the C17 house, and to the north-east by the surviving range of the C15 house, with
early-C20 ranges beyond and to the west. Cruciform stone flagged walks converge in
a central, circular fountain pool. The outer quarters of the garden are laid to lawn,
while low stone walls to the west echo the central circular motif. A shallow flight
of stone steps rises on the central western axis to reach a further area of lawn and
the early-C20 service wing.
The gate in the wall above the croquet lawn leads to an area of grass to the west,
which was laid out as tennis courts c.1920, with a thick yew hedge with a central
exedra enclosing it on its western side. At the northern end of this terrace the 1960s
buildings built for the police training centre can be seen. The westernmost terrace,
beyond the yew hedge, is a wild garden with a small pond with an ornamental balustrade
at its northern end. South and west of the terraces and formal gardens is a shelter
belt of trees rising to the ridge to the west offering privacy and enclosure to the
estate.
The stable courtyard lies to the west of the courtyard garden, and partially comprises
mid-C20 buildings. An historic range faces Chantmarle Lane to its north with an area
beyond of open grass with some fruit trees surviving from the orchard shown on early
Ordnance Survey maps.
Early-C20 formal gardens designed by Francis Inigo Thomas for Francis Savile, perhaps incorporating elements of an early-C17 formal garden, and extended c.1920 by Edward Warren.
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.
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The gardens at Chantmarle are included on the Register of Parks and Gardens at Grade II* for the following principal reasons: * Date: as a good example of an early C20 formal garden, associated with a largely C17 manor house (listed Grade I); * Design quality: the design and layout of the gardens are of a particularly high quality, as expressed in the layout of the gardens and the formal architectural features which express the axes through the site; * Architect and designer: the gardens were laid out by Francis Inigo Thomas, a noted garden designer; * Group value: the gardens have strong group value with Chantmarle Manor (Grade I), the footbridge, terrace walls, steps and balustrading and approach bridge over the railway (Grade II).
Books and journals
Mowl, T, Historic Gardens of Dorset, (2003), 134-138
Newman, J, Pevsner, n, Buildings of England: Dorset, (2002), 137-139
Oswald, A, Country Houses of Dorset, (1959), 97-99
Other
First Edition Ordnance Survey, 1888
Second Edition Ordnance Survey, 1903