Identification and description | |||||
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Name | CAVERSHAM PARK | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 51.479787 Longitude: -0.95632842 National Grid Reference: SU7257476164 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1000524 Date first listed: 30-Sep-1987 |
This record was the subject of a minor enhancement on 7th April 2016.
A country house with the remains of an early C18 formal garden by Stephen Switzer
flanking mid C19 formal terraces, surrounded by the remains of a landscape park laid
out in the 1760s by Lancelot Brown.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Lord Craven owned the Caversham Park estate during the mid to late C17, rebuilding
the Elizabethan manor house after 1660, probably with William Winde as the architect.
The estate was sold in 1697, passing by the 1720s into the hands of William, first
Baron, and later Earl, Cadogan (d 1726). Cadogan, a soldier and friend of the Duke
of Marlborough, rebuilt the manor house in grander style, probably on a new site.
A detailed agreement of 1718 between Stephen Switzer (1682-1745) and the Earl of Cadogan
(Berkshire RO) describes a proposal to make terraces, canals, fisheries and a great
formal parterre, for £1394, which corresponds closely with a plan of 1723 published
by Colen Campbell in Vitruvius Britannicus III, 1725 (Bisgrove and Stoneham 1993).
Campbell's accompanying description mentions a Mr Acres, who was probably employed
to lay out the extensive formal garden surrounding the house, which was constructed
around an axis described as a 'noble terrace, which is twelve hundred feet long'.
In the mid 1760s Lancelot Brown (1716-83) was employed by the second Baron Cadogan
to landscape the grounds, at which time the formal gardens, still present in the 1750s
(Rocque, 1761), were largely swept away, although Brown incorporated major structural
elements into his own designs. It appears that none of Brown's drawings survive, nor
his account books for this period. The results of Brown's work are described by Thomas
Whately in his Observations on Modern Gardening (1770), and again by Thomas Jefferson
in his 'Memorandums Made on a Tour to Some of the Gardens in England' (1786). The
house burnt down during this period, being replaced by a smaller building, enlarged
by Major Charles Marsack following his purchase of the estate in 1784. William Crawshay
bought the estate in 1838, following a period of some dilapidation (National Trust
1990) and in 1850 the house burnt down once more, to be rebuilt again, this time possibly
by J T Crews. The Crawshays sold the estate in 1920, it being occupied by the Oratory
School until the Second World War. During the War the BBC moved into the house, which
remains the home of their Monitoring Service. Large parts of the parkland were engulfed
by Caversham Park Village in the 1960s and 1970s.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Caversham Park lies enclosed by the
C20 development of Caversham, once a separate village but now a suburb of Reading.
The c 40ha site is bounded largely by the mid to late C20 development of Caversham
Park Village, with to the south the open spaces of allotments and Reading Cemetery
and Crematorium. The house and park to the north lie on a plateau at the top of a
south-east-facing slope. Panoramic views extend southwards from the house and garden
terraces at the top of the slope across Caversham and Reading, towards low, distant
hills, probably formerly with views of the Thames which lies 2km to the south.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES Caversham Park is entered at the north-west corner of the
park, off Peppard Road, 250m west of the house. Here the drive is flanked by two stone
gate piers, topped with ball finials, supporting iron gates, in turn flanked by iron
pedestrian gates and beyond this iron railings terminated by a further pair of stone
piers (c 1850, listed grade II). The drive passes a single-storey lodge standing adjacent
to the south, continuing east through the park and passing to the north of the stuccoed
former stables (now converted to accommodation) standing close to the west end of
the house. The drive arrives at a tarmac carriage sweep adjacent to a porte-cochère
on the north front of the house, overlooking the north park which is now maintained
as playing fields.
Formerly, during the C19 and until the mid C20 (OS) and the development of Caversham
Park Village, the drive continued from the north front north-east through the park,
curving south-east past Milestone Wood to a lodge standing by the Henley Road 1.2km
south-east of the house. Part of the course of this drive is now incorporated in a
pedestrian path running parallel and to the east of Galsworthy Drive. In the early
C18 (Vitruvius Britannicus) the house was approached directly from gates to the north
via a straight avenue arriving at a formal forecourt on the north front.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Caversham Park (1850s, possibly J T Crews, listed grade II) stands
at the centre of the northern half of the site, at the top of a slope down to the
Thames to the south-east, overlooking Caversham and Reading and beyond this a low
range of wooded hills. The three-storey ashlar house replaced a series of houses ,
the last of which, dating from the late C18, burnt down in 1850. The house has been
modified and extended for office use during the mid to late C20.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens consist of formal 1720s and mid C19 terraces
descending south from the garden front of the house, flanked by wooded pleasure grounds
containing further remains of the formal 1720s layout.
The south, garden front of the house opens onto a broad gravel path running along
the top of an adjacent terrace. From here three flights of stone steps descend a grass
bank to a rectangular lawn, from the south side of which three further flights of
stone steps descend to a lower rectangular lawn bounded on the south side by an iron
fence dividing the lawn from a paddock beyond. The paddock is now (1998) part of the
parkland, but formerly (OS 1877; 1914) was part of the pleasure grounds, divided from
the parkland by a ditch and bank, possibly part of a former ha-ha. The remains of
the ditch, lying c 150m south of the house, are bounded by a sporadic, informal hedgerow.
The upper terrace extends 200m from the west end of the house, laid to grass flanked
by clipped laurel hedges and beyond this woodland, and terminated at the west end
by a stone temple (C19, on the site of an earlier structure, listed grade II) with
a tetrastyle Doric portico overlooking the length of the terrace to the east. From
here a path runs south-east down the hillside on which is situated the west arm of
the wooded pleasure grounds. The path passes the west end of a 200m long canal situated
250m south-west of the house. Surrounded by a grass path, the canal is set within
woodland, overlooking to the east the lower lawn lying south of the house. From the
canal the grass path continues south-east along the west boundary of the pleasure
grounds, turning north-east 300m from the house to run along the northern boundary
of the former walled kitchen garden. Some 150m south of the house the path turns north
to arrive at the east end of the canal from where informal lawns planted with specimen
trees and shrubs extend north to the upper terrace by the house.
The broad gravel path on the upper terrace extends through the wooded eastern arm
of the pleasure grounds, terminating at the boundary, 250m east of the house. An informal
path encircles this arm of the pleasure grounds, leading south-east off the gravel
path at the east end of the house. A small, south-facing wooden pavilion stands within
the southern half of the woodland, close to the southern edge, possibly having formerly
overlooked the park sloping away to the south, before trees obscured the view. The
area north of the west/east axial path has recently been replanted with specimen trees
set in informal meadow, and also contains transmitting equipment. A brick wall (C18/C19,
listed grade II) encloses parts of the boundary of this arm of the pleasure grounds
to the north and east.
In the 1720s Switzer's grand garden surrounding the house (described and depicted
in Vitruvius Britannicus 1725) contained parterres to the east and south. Two 200m
long canals were constructed, possibly with cascades and amphitheatres at the outer
ends as quoted for by Switzer (Berkshire RO: D/EX 258/9), on the hillside to the south-west
and south-east of the house. The present canal appears to be one of these two, and
was at that time flanked to the south by a wilderness containing a serpentine path.
This area, now wooded, retains some mature yew trees and sculpted land formation.
By the mid C18 (Rocque, 1761) the axial terrace walk was dominant in the garden, terminated
at the west end by a garden building. A third canal appears to have been added by
this time, lying adjacent to that lying south-west of the house, and several of the
parterres seem to have been removed and others simplified. Brown's landscaping retained
the axial terrace path and the canals. By the 1870s (OS 1878) the two terraced lawns
had been constructed below the centre of the great axial terrace, the lower one being
dotted with small, oval flower beds. Additionally, two of the canals had gone, leaving
that shown on Switzer's plan lying to the south-west of the house, although in shorter
and wider form than that advocated by Switzer, and more rounded in outline.
PARK The remains of the park are divided into two sections, the area north of the
house, and that extending south from the garden and pleasure grounds. The northern
section, occupying a plateau, is now largely given over to playing fields with trees
planted around the northern perimeter. The north park is overlooked by the north,
entrance front of the house, and enjoys views north towards a low, wooded hillside
lying beyond Caversham Park Village. The Village occupies land that was formerly part
of the park.
The southern section of the park, laid to pasture with two clumps of trees, occupies
the south-facing slope overlooking Caversham, Reading and beyond this low, wooded
hills. Formerly (before Caversham's C20 development) the park probably enjoyed views
down to the Thames.
In the early C18 (Vitruvius Britannicus, plan of 1723) the broad entrance avenue extended
from the north front across what became the north park, flanked by four rows of trees
to either side. To the east lay open parkland containing a sequence of formal ponds
and a farm complex. To the west of the avenue lay a formal arrangement of trees, possibly
an orchard, and a further rectangular pond. Three parallel avenues extended from the
gardens on the south front across extensive lawns which subsequently became the south
park, flanked to west and east by belts of trees laid out in rows. In the description
accompanying the Vitruvius Britannicus plan, the park beyond was mentioned as being
well-wooded, watered and stocked with deer, with reference to an excellent pheasantry
and a menagerie. This arrangement remained largely intact until the mid C18 (Rocque,
1761), Lancelot Brown landscaping the estate in the 1760s. The park retained much
of Brown's work until the 1960s and 1970s, when it was much reduced on all sides by
the construction of Caversham Park Village and associated items including Reading
Crematorium, Cemetery and allotments, and a school.
KITCHEN GARDEN The brick-walled kitchen garden (C18/C19, listed grade II) lies 200m
south-west of the house, at the south-west corner of the park, and is now (1998) largely
filled with mobile homes. Brick cross walls divide the area into several compartments,
connected by communicating arches, and support mid C19 potting sheds. The walled garden
is reached via a straight lane from the Peppard Road to the west, the entrance being
marked by a C19, two-storey lodge lying 500m south-west of the house.
REFERENCES
C Campbell, Vitruvius Britannicus III, (1725), pl 96 N Pevsner, The Buildings of England:
Berkshire (1966), p 111 D Stroud, Capability Brown (1975), p132, pl 35a M Kift, Life
in Old Caversham (1980), pp 56-9 M Kift, Look Back at Caversham (1983), p19 J D Hunt
and P Willis (eds), The Genius of the Place (1988), pp 299, 334 In Search of English
Gardens: The Travels of John Claudius Loudon and his wife Jane, (National Trust Classics
1990), p110 R Bisgrove and J Stoneham, History of the Caversham Park Landscape (1992)
[copy on EH file] J Malpas, Caversham Park and its Owners (1997)
Maps J Rocque, Map of Berkshire, 1761 T Pride, A topographical map of the Town of
Reading and the County adjacent to an extent of 10 miles, 1790
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1877 2nd edition published 1914 3rd edition
published 1938 OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1878 2nd edition published 1913
3rd edition published 1932
Description written: September 1998 Register Inspector: SR Edited: March 2000
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.