Identification and description | |||||
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Name | INCE BLUNDELL PARK | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 53.516152 Longitude: -3.0123544 National Grid Reference: SD 32970 02641 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1000492 Date first listed: 01-Feb-1986 |
Gardens and a park laid out in two main phases, commencing c 1760 and completed by
1786. The site retains a good range of associated structures and features, including
some very fine late C18 park and garden buildings, reflecting the artistic and antiquarian
interests of its creator, the dilettante Henry Blundell.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
The Blundell family held land in the area from the C12 and the Old Hall at Ince Blundell
(listed grade II*) is thought to date from the late C16. The park was formed in the
years leading up to and following 1766 when a map was prepared showing the grounds
within the first park wall and outlining a further area to be imparked. Henry Blundell
(c 1730-1810) inherited in 1761 and influenced by his neighbour Charles Towneley of
Towneley Hall (qv), he began collecting antique sculpture which he housed in buildings
designed for the purpose in grounds close to the new Hall. The Hall and park were
sold in the 1960s. The Hall and gardens are now (1997) used by a residential care
home and the parkland is farmed. The park supported a herd of deer until the mid C20.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Ince Blundell Hall is situated c 0.5km
south-east of Ince Blundell. The c 80ha park consists of level, slightly rolling land
in an area which is predominantly rural and agricultural. The boundary is formed for
most of its length by a brick wall with a flat stone coping which runs from the present
main entrance on Back-o-th-Town Lane, on the north side of the site, around the east,
south and west sides to West Lodge. From that point onwards the north-west and north
boundary is formed by fencing along the edge of Moor Lane and Cross Barn Lane , and
it returns as a fence along part of Back-o-th-Town Lane. A lane on the north-east
side of the Hall was diverted when the site was imparked and was replaced by Park
Wall Road. A writ for the enclosure of the highway is dated 1765 (Keyte 1984).
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES There are six main entrances to the park. At the north-west
tip of the site the present main entrance to the Hall is on Back-o-th-Town Lane, where
there are gates and gate piers of red sandstone surmounted by urns. A drive, now disused,
leads past a lodge and curves southwards running to the front of the Hall. A second
drive runs west of the lodge, then south-west to the church which is attached to the
rear of the Hall and to the service wing. The approach divides and continues to a
stable block, joining a drive running from West Lodge on the west side of the site.
This arrangement is shown on the 2nd edition OS map published 1909 but not on the
1st edition surveyed 1845-6. The former principal entrance to the Hall and park is
situated to the south, at the junction of Park Wall Road and Moor Lane. This is called
the Lion Gate (listed grade II) and is an ambitious neo-classical composition copied
from a painting by Sebastiano Ricci. The drive leads northwards and formerly ran to
the Hall, as shown on the large-scale OS map of 1927 and earlier maps. It was diverted
in front of the Hall, probably after the estate was sold in the 1960s, and now connects
with a drive which runs around the park perimeter. The line of the drive and turning
circle in front of the art gallery adjacent to the Hall (see below) is still visible.
There are two entrances on the east side of the site, both on Park Wall Road. The
northernmost is opposite Carr Side Lane and consists of a pair of rusticated stone
gate piers (1770-6, listed grade II). This entrance leads to the perimeter drive and
to a late C20 track running south-west through Tower Wood to join the main drive from
the Lion Gate. The other entrance, opposite East Lane, consists of a neo-classical
archway flanked by pedestrian entrances (1770-6, listed grade II). This seems formerly
to have connected with the perimeter drive only but now also leads to a track running
west across the park to join with the main drive from the Lion Gate. On the west side
of the site West Lodge (mid C19, listed grade II) consists of a gatehouse with a central
arched gateway. The line of the drive which leads north-east to the Old Hall and stables
is shown on the 1909 OS map. The 1845 OS map shows that at this time it split into
two, with one branch leading to a courtyard west of the stable block, and the other
branch, to the east of this, leading directly to the Hall between the Old Hall and
stable block. This part of the drive has been blocked from the point at which it reached
the Old Hall and its line is not discernible in the gardens. An informal entrance
on the north side leads south-east off Cross Barn Lane to the former home farm (outside
the registered area) and on into the park, running south to the stable block.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Ince Blundell Hall (listed grade II*) was built 1720-50 for Robert
Blundell. It is situated in the north-west part of the site. Attached to the north-east
is an art gallery of 1802-10 (listed grade II*) loosely modelled on the Pantheon in
Rome and named after it. This was formerly a separate building and was joined to the
main house later in the C19. Attached to the north-east end of the Hall's service
block is a chapel of 1858 (listed grade II) which serves as a parish church. Some
100m south-west of the Hall lies the now disused Ince Blundell Old Hall (late C16/early
C17, listed grade II*). Some 30m south-east of this building is an early C19 stable
block (listed grade II).
In the angle formed by the main Hall and the service wing attached to the north there
is a circular grassed area planted with a single tree, as shown on the 1845 OS map.
At that time this spot was reached by a drive running directly to the Hall from West
Lodge, and this arrangement probably originated as a turning circle.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens and pleasure grounds consist of woodland
to the north and west of the Hall and gardens to the south and east. The principal,
south front overlooks a formal garden consisting of a terrace running in front of
the house and Pantheon with steps leading down from the central Hall entrance to a
sunken oval area. This area has a central mound with an early C19 Tuscan column supporting
an eagle (listed grade II) which is shown in this position on the 1845 OS map. A path
runs south-east from the south-east side of the sunken area to a point c 60m from
the Hall. A ha-ha which runs from a point c 120m north-east of the Hall to a point
c 140m south-west of it bows outwards in alignment with the path.
Immediately south and west of the Hall there are informal lawns fringed by trees on
the site of a formal garden shown on a map of c 1760. Some 70m to the west, on the
edge of the lawn and fronting the walls of a kitchen garden, is a neo-classical garden
temple (c 1775, listed grade II*) designed by W Everard of Liverpool as a sculpture
gallery. In the frieze is an inscription: 'HIC VER ASSIDUUM ATQUE ALIENIS MENSIBUS
AESTAS' (here are perpetual spring and summer in unexpected months), possibly referring
to the kitchen garden which could be reached through the temple at one time, or to
a glasshouse said to have been affixed to the rear (CL 1958). The gardens south of
the Hall were thus articulated around the sculpture galleries which Henry Blundell
had chosen to express as detached neo-classical buildings within the grounds rather
than incorporating them directly into the Hall.
To the south-west scattered trees partially screen lawns in an area fringed with trees
and closed on the north-west side by the rear of the stable block. In a lawn immediately
south of this and c 130m south-west of the Hall is a circular sunken area and c 10m
south of this is another, irregular, sunken area with paving and a small pond probably
constructed in the late C20. This part of the grounds is shown included in the gardens
on the 1909 OS map, but the 1845 map shows that a stable courtyard and a drive leading
to the Hall partially occupied the area.
Some 100m south of the Hall is the tip of a lake which runs north/south and is c 240m
long. It is of sinuous shape and the shores are planted with ornamental shrubs. The
lake was created when the park was laid out and is shown on Yates' county map of 1786.
Views of the water can be obtained form various points in the gardens, and from the
head of the lake its scale is exaggerated by its shape and the surrounding planting.
To the west of the lake and the gardens is an area of ornamental woodland with paths
leading through it. This extends to the boundary of the site in its north-west corner
and it also extends north of the Hall in an area called Crow Wood. This layout is
suggested on the 1786 map; the 1845 OS map shows that parts of it were open land at
that time, while the 1909 map shows it with a system of interlocking paths, most of
which are no longer visible.
PARK The park occupies an elliptical area to the south and south-east of the Hall.
It consists of level, slightly rolling grassland with some scattered mature trees.
There is planting along the perimeter but this is not as dense as is shown on the
1845 OS map. Tower Wood, situated towards the centre of the park, was the site of
Blundell Tower (now demolished), a prospect tower or eyecatcher which predated the
creation of the park. It is shown in a watercolour of 1790 as a two-storey octagonal
structure in Gothick style. The woodland around the site of the tower is shown on
the OS map of 1907 but not that of 1845. The most prominent planted feature was a
large round clump, called Millhouse Clump, south of the centre of the park. It is
shown on the 1845 OS map but only as scattered trees on the 1909 map.
The park has a number of ponds scattered around the perimeter. It is used mainly for
grazing and is divided into fields with C20 fencing.
KITCHEN GARDEN A kitchen garden is situated c 30m west of the Hall. The north-western
boundary is marked by a brick wall which continues alongside the drive leading to
the stables, and links the Old Hall and stable block. The eastern wall continues for
c 50m south of its junction with the northern wall. The south side is bounded by a
belt of trees and shrubs on each side of the garden temple. The 1845 OS map shows
that the garden was then enclosed on all sides and was elliptical in shape. A round-arched
entrance stands on the north-east side and a gated entrance c 30m south of this.
In the garden there are the remains of an apsidal brick structure (listed grade II)
which was connected to the garden temple, possibly by a walkway as is suggested on
the 1845 OS map. The brick structure has walls attached on each side, running north-east
and south-west, with a range of sheds and ancillary buildings attached to the north
side. Two glasshouses in the area between this and the northern wall are shown on
the 1927 OS map and one of the two surviving glasshouses probably dates from that
period.
An additional kitchen garden, called the Peachery, is situated c 250m west of the
Hall in woodland. It is of brick with a rectangular plan. It has a late C20 building
within it built as a retreat for a religious order.
REFERENCES The Victoria History of the County of Lancashire 3, (1907), pp 78-85 Country
Life, 123 (10 April 1958), pp 756-9; (17 April 1958), pp 816-19; (24 April 1958),
pp 876-7 N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: North Lancashire (1969), pp 128-9 V
Keyte, Landscape Parks in South West Lancashire, (unpub MPhil thesis, Univ of Liverpool
1984), pp 148-50, 295
Maps Plan of Fields, Roads, and Old Park before inclosed, nd (c 1760), (Lancashire
Record Office, DDIn); in Keyte 1984 Pulford, A Map of the Grounds within the first
park wall as in the year 1766, with the grounds as they were then outside the wall
and all around the House, (Lancashire Record Office, DDIn); in Keyte 1984 W Yates,
Map of the County Palatine of Lancaster, 1786 C Greenwood, The County Palatine of
Lancaster, 1818
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1845-6 2nd edition published 1909 OS 25" to
1 mile: 1927 edition
Description written: July 1997 Register Inspector: CEH Edited: March 1999
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.