Identification and description | |||||||||||||
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Name | SWAFFHAM PRIOR HOUSE | ||||||||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 52.251541 Longitude: 0.28623131 National Grid Reference: TL 56161 63947 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1000396 Date first listed: 16-Jan-1985 |
A house of predominantly C16 origin, but with evidence of an earlier core, surrounded
by park and gardens laid out in the early C19 and enlarged in the 1880s, including
the addition of a water garden.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
In the late C16 John Rant purchased the Swaffham Prior estate, on which stood a house
and stable block built in c 1550. Four generations of his family, all called Roger
Rant, succeeded to the estate over the subsequent 200 years, during which time various
alterations and additions were made to the house in the early and late C17. The last
Roger Rant died in 1747 and his widow sold the estate in 1751 to Dr John Peter Allix,
Dean of Gloucester and Ely who lived in the nearby vicarage and purchased Swaffham
Prior House for his son Charles on his marriage to Catherine Greene. Charles and Catherine
made substantial alterations to the House, giving it a new Georgian facade. At this
time the grounds were confined to an area of c 4ha but between 1814 and 1834 the Allix
family laid out a small park. In c 1870 Charles Peter Allix made further alterations
and extensions to the House and followed this in the 1880s by enlarging the park.
He also created an elaborate water garden to the south-east of the House and planted
an avenue in the park linking the House to the new Swaffham Prior Railway Station
to the north-west. The Allix family continued to own the estate until 1982, although
from 1900 onwards lived elsewhere and rented the property. During the Second World
War the land army occupied the House and worked on the park. In 1982 the estate was
divided into lots and sold. The House, grounds and part of the park were purchased
by Mr and Mrs Michael Marshall who began a programme of restoration. The site remains
(1999) in divided private ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Swaffham Prior House lies c 15km to
the north-east of Cambridge on the minor B1102 Cambridge to Burwell road. The House
and park are situated to the west of the village of Swaffham Prior which forms much
of the north-east boundary, the south-east boundary being formed by the B1102, the
south-west by farmland, and the north-west boundary by the disused Cambridge to Mildenhall
railway line. The c 56ha park is roughly rectangular, set on relatively flat ground
in a rural part of east Cambridgeshire characterised by open fields and long views.
It is mostly enclosed on all sides by boundary plantations.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The site has two entrance drives, both off the B1102. East
Lodge (listed grade II) lies c 250m to the east of the House, on the eastern corner
of the park. It is an early to mid C18 brick and tile cottage which originally lay
on the village High Street before its diversion in the late C19 when the park was
enlarged slightly to the south and the cottage converted for use as a lodge. The drive
runs west, past another former High Street property, the timber-framed Dove House
Cottage (listed grade II), to arrive at the gravelled south-east, entrance front.
It continues in a sweep past the House and stable block before turning south to exit
the park towards the southern end of the B1102 boundary c 300m south of the House.
Here it passes through elaborate wrought-iron gates (late C20) hung on early to mid
C19 brick gate piers (listed grade II) which stand beside the early C19 South Lodge
(listed grade II), a cream brick and tile single-storey square building with a canted
porch to the front and gothic windows.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Swaffham Prior House (listed grade II) is a small country house
of two storeys and attics, built in cream brick under a plain tile roof. The main
entrance facade has nine bays, the central three projecting slightly and incorporating
a Doric portico. Although Georgian in appearance, the original C16 Elizabethan E-plan
house survives around an earlier core, engulfed in the C18 alterations which were
carried out by Charles Allix, who in addition to adding the new style, also turned
the House round to face south-east. There were Victorian additions in the late C19
and the north-west wing was added in 2000.
Immediately to the south of Swaffham Prior House is a small timber-framed C16 house,
with later C17 wing (listed grade II). The end gable of the later wing is surmounted
by a clock turret, added in the late C19 when the building was converted for use as
stables and outbuildings.
On the eastern boundary of the park (within the registered site) stands Baldwin Manor
(listed grade II*), the surviving c 1500 manor house associated with the estate, retained
by the estate as a dower house until sold into private ownership during the mid C20.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens and pleasure grounds extend to c 4ha surrounding
the House. To the south-east a sweeping lawn leads to a wooded pleasure ground where
the elaborate Water Gardens were built in the 1880s by Charles Peter Allix. These
comprise a series of informal pools, crossed by little brick footbridges and fed at
the southern end by a cascade linked to an underground reservoir and diesel pumping
system. The walk from the Water Gardens runs north across the drive and into a strip
of late C19 wooded pleasure ground planted between the east side of the House and
Baldwin Manor, following the line of a little canalised water channel which terminates
in a woodland pool. Within these woods the remains of a laburnum-hung wrought-iron
pergola survives amongst the pine, cedar, box and yew.
An open lawn presently lies off the north-west front, bounded by a c 80m long ha-ha
c 130m from the House terrace which marks the boundary of the old garden prior to
the early C19 establishment of the park. A new formal garden is planned for this area
(2000).
PARK The park surrounds the House to north, south and west. The western section is
predominantly woodland, mainly C19 plantations with later C20 additions of Norway
spruce. Most of the park to the north and south (the southern area known as the Great
Park) remains under grass, grazed by deer, and retains many mature parkland trees
of mixed species including beech, ash, horse chestnut and oak, as well as some exotic
species such as ginkgo and cedar. Restoration planting was carried out in the late
1990s following storm damage sustained in the 1987 storm. The Great Park is partly
divided by deer fences and includes a small block of exotic planting known as The
Horseshoe which dates from the early to mid C19 when the park was first laid out.
The north park is cut through by a lime avenue which defines a walk from the ha-ha
at the back of the House, north-north-west for c 400m to Swaffham Prior Railway Station.
Charles Peter Allix assisted the development of the Cambridge to Mildenhall railway
line and his son Charles Israel Loraine Allix cut the first sod when the village station
was built in 1883. It opened in 1884 and the avenue to it was planted in 1890. The
station closed in 1964.
The north-west corner of the park is now (1999) partly under arable cultivation and
partly covered by a mid C20 Norway spruce plantation.
KITCHEN GARDEN The walled kitchen garden covers c 1ha and lies c 40m to the south-west
of the House, attached to the stables and garage block. Its date of origin is not
clear but it probably dates from the mid C18 when the House was substantially remodelled.
Some of the area within the single compartment is still (1990s) used for growing vegetables
with the remainder laid to grass. Also within the walls stands the late C19 white
brick and tile tool store and potting shed, with two arched openings on its south-east
face looking onto flanking glasshouses of the same period. The remains of a rose arch
and some clipped yew survive on the north-west side of the buildings. Beyond the north
wall is a new (late C20) walled enclosure containing a swimming pool.
REFERENCES
N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Cambridgeshire (1970), p 467 Roy Comm Hist Monuments
of Engl Inventories: North-east Cambridgeshire (1972), pp 120-1 J Kenworthy-Browne
et al, Burke's and Savills Guide to Country Houses III, (1981), p 25 Swaffham Prior
House, guidebook, (1988) Cambridgeshire Parklands, (Cambridgeshire Record Office 1990),
p 52 T Way, Cambridgeshire parklands survey, (Internal survey for Cambridgeshire County
Council 1998)
Maps OS Surveyor's drawings, 1810, 1834 (British Library Maps) OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st
edition published 1886 2nd edition published 1903 3rd edition published 1927 OS 25"
to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1886 2nd edition published 1901
Description written: March 2000 Amended: December 2000 Register Inspector: EMP Edited:
January 2001
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.