Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | CHURCH HOUSE, LECHLADE | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 51.693303 Longitude: -1.6901463 National Grid Reference: SU 21514 99440 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1000769 Date first listed: 28-Feb-1986 |
C18 formal gardens with a large rectangular pool and two C18 garden buildings.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Parts of Church House and its garden, such as the gate piers to the north and south
of the House, and probably the summerhouse, may have been constructed by Francis Smith
of Warwick (1662-1738) (owner pers comm, 1999). The Ainge family, from Cirencester,
lived at Church House from the C17 (Williams 1888). They were wharfingers who traded
from the Old Wharf at the end of the garden (VCH 1981). John Ainge (d 1714) was a
warden in St Lawrence's church in 1678 and his son Richard (d 1730) lived at Church
House in the early C18. In 1730, the house was squared for Richard Ainge (presumably
Richard's son) and the gazebo and summerhouse were probably added. Rudder (1779) says
that Richard Ainge had a good house and estate in the parish which presumably refers
to Church House. When Richard died without issue in 1778, the estate passed to his
sister, Catherine Hughes, and later, by marriage, to the Golding family. By 1888,
the Walker family, descendants of the Ainges, owned Church House. They remained in
residence until the First World War, after which the Stephens family purchased the
house. Church House changed hands again in the 1950s and remains (2000) in private
ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Church House stands in the south-east
quarter of the village of Lechlade, which is c 20km east of Cirencester and 15km north
of Swindon. The House is 50m to the south-east of St Lawrence's church and the gardens
extend mainly south and west from the House. The sub-rectangular registered area of
c 1ha shares its stone north wall with the churchyard. The western hedge and eastern
wall separate the gardens from village houses and a school (built 1835 by the church)
respectively. The southern boundary is a ha-ha, dividing an orchard from a paddock
beyond which leads down to the River Thames, c 100m to the south. The gardens are
a few metres higher than the River Thames and have open views to the river and watermeadows
beyond and to Ha'penny Bridge (built 1792) to the south-west. The church of St Lawrence
also forms an important visual element of the garden scheme and can be seen from most
parts of the gardens.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The main approach to Church House is from the churchyard
to its north. A path (Shelley's Walk) runs east/west, north of the church, and another
path off this leads south to Church House. Two square, 3m high ashlar piers, with
indented corners and ball finials on a moulded plinth (listed grade II with Church
House) support a late C20 wrought-iron gate and overthrow. Matching late C20 railings
on a low coped wall of coursed rubble stone, probably of late C19 or early C20 date,
extend east and west from the gate. Beyond the gate, a flagged stone path extends
south to the front door.
A back entrance to Church House is via a small courtyard, flanked by garden buildings
on its east and south sides, just outside the north-west part of the registered area,
leading off a lane to the west of the church.
The Old Wharf, a small wharf c 100m south-south-east of Church House, was excavated
and restored in the late C20. This once provided access from the river.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING The central core of Church House (listed grade II) was probably
constructed in the late C17 but the House was enlarged and refronted in the early
C18. The main, central square range, of rubble stone with alternating chamfered quoins,
has two storeys and an attic. The two flanking wings, extending east and west, were
built after the First World War, in similar materials. The interior panelling of the
sitting room in the central range exactly matches that of the gazebo.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS To the north of the central range of Church House is
a small square forecourt (c 10 x 10m). It is enclosed by a low stone wall and iron
railings to the north, a wall of the House to the south, and walls of stone-capped
coursed rubble and cut stone to the west and east. These walls are c 2m high, except
where a stone shed forms part of the east wall, increasing its height to c 3m. A straight,
stone-flagged path leads from the entrance gates, across the forecourt, to the front
door and is flanked by a small lawn to each side, with herbaceous borders between
the lawns and walls. A large, clipped Irish yew tree grows just outside this compartment,
to the east, and is highly visible from it. At the south-east corner of the forecourt,
a wooden gate in the wall gives access to a small enclosed yard. At the south-west
corner of the forecourt, a C20 wrought-iron gate leads west to the kitchen garden.
A gravel path along the wall of the House connects the two gates.
Between the forecourt and the kitchen garden is another small rectangular compartment
(also c 10 x 10m), originally part of the kitchen garden. The gravel path from the
forecourt continues west as a flagged path, on the same alignment, across this compartment.
To the south of the path is an area of gravel, bisected by a path to the house. To
the north is a small, formal, late C20 herb garden in a square bed divided by six
narrow paths, leading to a central urn. A two-storey, square, rendered stone gazebo
(early to mid C18, listed grade II) with a pyramidal stone slate roof stands outside
this compartment to the north-west, and is visible from it, with its basement accessed
at the north-west corner of the compartment. A window in its north side overlooks
the churchyard. A low wall of coursed rubble and three stone steps divide the compartment
from the kitchen garden, which is to the west and at a slightly higher level than
the ornamental gardens.
A broad gravel walk extends along the south face of the House to a wooden gate in
the east wall of the gardens. The south side of the path's western half is supported
by a 2m high wall, to the south of which is the fishpond. At the west end of the path,
five stone steps lead up to the kitchen garden. At the top of the steps is a pair
of C20 wrought-iron gates between tall ashlar gate piers with ball finials, thought
to be earlier than the piers to the north and south of the House (owner pers comm,
1999).
Another gravel path leads south from the middle of the first, at right angles to the
House and aligned on a window (formerly a door) in the east part of the southern face
of the central range. To the east of the path is a large rectangular croquet lawn
(c 50m long), with a crinkle-crankle eastern edge. An herbaceous border lies between
the lawn and the wall, which is mainly brick, with an eastern stone section. At the
south end of the lawn, and separated from it by a low yew hedge, is a nuttery of coppiced
hazel. The south side of the nuttery is supported by a 1.5m high stone wall. At the
south end of the path is another pair of gate piers, almost identical to those to
the north of Church House (but unlisted). It is likely that there would once have
been railings between the piers, forming a clairvoie (owner pers comm, 1999). Stone
steps lead south from the piers, down to a rectangular lawn edged by low rubble walls
to the south and east and formerly used as a tennis court. A gap in the centre of
the south wall leads to a grass walk, running east/west, edged to the south by a beech
hedge. The walk leads east to the wharf, which was excavated and restored in the early
1970s. A strip of woodland, with grass and shrubs, extends along the east side of
the wharf, down to the river.
The rectangular pool (c 50 x 10m) extends south from a point c 5m from the west wing
of the House. It is thought to have been a fishpond (owner pers comm, 1999), rather
than a Dutch-style water garden as suggested by Verey (1970), and is c 2m lower than
the garden to the east and 3m lower than the garden to the west, with sloping grass
banks. The stone edge was replaced in the late C20 when the central fountain was put
in. At its south end is a stone bench, in front (north) of a screen of yew trees.
Some 5m south-west of the pool is a late C20 rectangular stone-flagged terrace, c
10m long and enclosed by low stone walls to the east, north, and west, and by wrought-iron
railings to the south, above the ha-ha.
A large rectangular orchard (c 60 x 80m) extends south of the kitchen garden and west
of the pool. Apple and pear trees, planted in rows, are mostly less than forty years
old, although some older trees remain. A ha-ha divides the orchard from the paddock
to the south.
The gardens have been developed since the mid C20 but originated in the C18. Unfortunately,
there are no documents to help confirm the C18 layout.
KITCHEN GARDEN The kitchen garden is bounded by the wall of the churchyard to the
north, by garden buildings to the west, by the House to the east, and by a low stone
wall to the south, along which runs a narrow herbaceous border over which there are
views of the orchard. A stone-edged rose bed extends north/south along the west end
of the House, but the rest of the kitchen garden is divided into two large rectangular
beds, surrounded by gravel paths, for vegetables and soft fruit. The central path
has a kink in it, indicating the position of a former thatched stone barn which stood
against the churchyard wall until at least 1876, and probably until the end of the
C19 (owner pers comm, 1999).
At the north-west corner of the kitchen garden is a stone barn with a stone-tiled
pitched roof and a dovecote built into the eaves. A stone wall, c 2m high, extends
south from the barn and, at the south-west corner of the garden, joins an east-facing
C18 summerhouse (listed grade II) which Verey (1970) calls 'a small classical later
C18 summerhouse or pavilion, brick-faced, with stone dressings'. To each side of the
summerhouse, a late C20 wrought-iron gate is set into the wall. An axial gravel path
runs east from the summerhouse, to meet that along the south face of the House.
REFERENCES
S Rudder, A New History of Gloucestershire (1779) A Williams, Lechlade: being the
history of the town, manor and estates, the priory and the church (1888) D Verey,
The Buildings of England: Gloucestershire The Cotswolds (1970), p 295 Victoria History
of the County of Gloucester VII, (1981), pp 116, 119-120
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1876, published 1884 2nd edition published
1901 3rd edition revised 1915, published 1923
Archival items Lechlade WI, Lechlade 1850-1957, (33375), (Gloucester Local Studies
Library) Photographs (private collection)
Description written: January 2000 Register Inspector: TVAC Edited: March 2003
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.