Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | WOOD HOUSE | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 50.747595 Longitude: -3.9076832 National Grid Reference: SX 65511 95957 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: I List Entry Number: 1000485 Date first listed: 12-Aug-1987 |
Early C20 formal gardens and parkland designed and landscaped by Thomas Mawson and
implemented by Robert Mawson of the Lakeland Nurseries, Windermere, surrounding a
house designed by Dan Gibson with a ground plan by Thomas Mawson.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Historically, Wood was a substantial Devon farm centred on a late C16 or early C17
house, lying some distance from the village of South Tawton. The early C19 Tithe map
(c 1840) shows a group of buildings on the site of the present house approached by
a drive on the line of the present service drive. An orchard and kitchen garden lay
to the south and south-west, while many of the other fields associated with the farm
were in arable cultivation, reflecting the relative fertility of the site. The early
C19 farm was let to Richard Lethbridge, whose family remained in occupation until
the early C20. The 1st edition OS map (1886) shows significant alteration to the grounds
at Wood, with the construction of the south-west drive and lodge, and the formation
of the lake to the south-east of the house. In 1900 William Lethbridge, a successful
barrister, consulted Thomas Mawson about further improvements to the estate (Mawson
and Mawson 1926). Mawson introduced Lethbridge to the architect Dan Gibson (Mawson
1927), with whom he had earlier had a partnership, and with whom he worked at Graythwaite
Hall, Cumbria and The Willows, Lancashire (qv). Mawson and Gibson collaborated on
the comprehensive remodelling of the existing house (ibid). Gibson was responsible
for the design of the new house, its furnishing, and the design of the home farm buildings
and alteration of the lodge on the south-west drive, while Mawson made an initial
ground plan for the house to ensure its relationship to his garden scheme. The house
and new gardens were substantially complete by 1905, although Mawson returned to make
further alterations to the south-west entrance. Mawson's landscape scheme was implemented
by his brother Robert Mawson, of Lakeland Nurseries, Windermere, and was described
by Thomas Mawson in an extensive, illustrated account of his work at Wood in the fifth
edition of The Art and Craft of Garden Making (1926). William Lethbridge died c 1920,
and the property remained in private hands until 1973 when it was sold and converted
into a country house hotel. It was subsequently resold, and is now (1998) again a
private residence.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Wood House is situated c 1.5km north
of the village of South Tawton and c 5km south-south-west of the village of North
Tawton, c 3km north of Dartmoor. The c 13ha site comprises c 4ha of formal gardens,
pleasure grounds, lake and kitchen gardens, and a further 9ha of parkland and plantations.
The site is enclosed to the west by a minor road leading from South Tawton north to
Taw Green, and to the north and north-east by a further minor road. To the east and
south the site adjoins agricultural land and is enclosed by fences and hedges. The
site rises from the east and south towards the west and north boundaries, with a significant
drop in level between the House and kitchen garden to the east. There are significant
views south and south-east from within the site towards Dartmoor, and from the higher
ground on the west side of the site towards woodland and agricultural land outside
the site to the east.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The site is approached from the minor road leading north
from South Tawton to Taw Green, which forms its western boundary. Convex wing walls
comprising rendered sections between rusticated granite pilasters flank square-section
granite gate piers with soffit-moulded caps, now (1998) surmounted by obelisk caps
with wrought-iron fleur-de-lys finials (removed from gate piers on the south-east
drive); the gate piers were originally surmounted by covered lead urns with flame
finials (Mawson and Mawson 1926). The gate piers support elaborate wrought-iron gates
with a crest in the manner of an overthrow (all listed grade II). Quadrant-shaped
lawns in front of the gateway are enclosed by low horizontal iron rails supported
on low granite posts. Within the gates a single-storey, rough-cast lodge (listed grade
II) designed by Dan Gibson stands to the south of the drive. From the entrance the
tarmac drive runs c 100m north-east through evergreen shrubbery and mixed trees, before
emerging into the park and turning north-north-east for c 260m before reaching the
carriage court on the west side of the House. The drive is separated from the park
to the east and west by metal estate fencing, and from a point c 200m south-west of
the House is flanked by specimen trees and shrubs. The south-west drive existed by
1886, but its present form is the work of Mawson. The carriage court to the west of
the House formed part of Mawson and Gibson's remodelling of the building, and replaced
an earlier carriage court on the south side of the House which is shown on the 1886
OS map. An archway connects the early C20 carriage court with the north-west drive
to the north of the House, which is again a remodelling by Mawson of an existing drive.
The north-west drive enters the service court north-east of the House between granite
gate piers (listed grade II*) designed by Mawson. A further drive approaches the House
from the minor road forming the north and north-east boundary. Some 270m south-east
of the House square-section granite gate piers surmounted by soffit-moulded flat caps
(originally with the obelisk finials now on the south-west gates) support elaborate
wrought-iron gates (all listed grade II*). The drive, now (1998) a track, runs west-north-west,
passing over a single-arch granite bridge designed by Mawson (listed grade II*) c
150m south-east of the House before passing immediately east of the House to reach
the farm buildings to the north-east. The farm drive separates the House and gardens
from the kitchen garden.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Wood House (listed grade II*) is a comprehensive rebuilding and
extension of an earlier house undertaken by the architect Dan Gibson for William Lethbridge
between 1900 and 1905. The landscape architect Thomas Mawson prepared the initial
ground plan for the house, ensuring its relationship to the terraces and garden scheme
(Mawson 1927). The two-storey rough-cast, slate-roofed house is designed in a restrained
Arts and Crafts Tudor style, with granite mullioned windows, gabled east and west
wings, and massive circular chimney stacks. The House is roughly 'H' shaped on plan,
with a projecting north-west wing which contains a circular-headed arch leading north
from the carriage court to the north-west drive. The north-west wing leads to a loggia
which connects at first-floor level with the gardens west of the carriage court. The
service quarters lie to the north-east and are arranged around a service court and
adjoin the stables, farm buildings and kitchen garden.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS Lying to the north, west and south of the House, the
gardens and pleasure grounds comprise a series of formal enclosures which lead south-east
to an area of ornamental planting around the C19 lake. The North Garden comprises
a level lawn retained by a low rubble wall north of the north-west drive, and is enclosed
to the north and west by rubble-stone walls (listed grade II*), now (1998) coped with
slates but originally thatched (Mawson and Mawson 1926). To the north-east the lawn
is enclosed by the west wall of the stables, while to the south it is overlooked by
the billiard room in the House. The north wall curves back behind a circular thatched
summerhouse (listed grade II*), whose conical roof is supported on two monolithic
granite columns. There is a stone bench seat within the summerhouse, and to east and
west it is flanked by round-headed niches which formerly contained statues (ibid).
The gardens west of the carriage court ascend on four terraces of varying depth with
an axial vista extending from the west door of the House to the Tea House at the end
of the cedar walk c 200m west. A grass bank to the west of the carriage court is retained
by a rubble-stone wall, and a flight of axially placed stone steps ascend between
square-section granite ashlar piers with flat caps (all listed grade II*) to a narrow
terrace with a crazy-paved granite path running north/south below the tennis lawn
(listed grade II*). This path connects via steps at its northern end with the loggia
at the west end of the north-west wing of the House. A further flight of stone steps
(listed grade II*) ascends to the double tennis lawn c 30m west of the House, which
is enclosed by grass banks to the south, west and north, and yew hedges which rise
to shaped square finials adjacent to openings on the east, south and west sides. Mawson's
published plan of the garden (ibid) indicates pergolas on the north and south sides
of the tennis lawn, but it is unclear whether these were realised. Plain stone steps
(listed grade II*) ascend west from the tennis lawn to a further narrow north/south
grass terrace enclosed by yew hedges. At its north end is a round-backed stone seat
(listed grade II*) which allows an extended view south across the bowling green towards
Dartmoor. The bowling green c 50m south-west of the House adjoins the southern end
of the third west terrace, and comprises a rectangular, yew hedge-enclosed lawn, with
a projecting rectangular bastion on the east side. To the west stands the Bowling
Green Pavilion (listed grade II*), designed by Mawson as a 'loggia with raised terrace'
(ibid). The Pavilion is conceived in a plain classical style in granite ashlar with
a triple arcade of round-headed arches flanked by projecting north and south wings
each with a single arch on the east side. The roof, reached by steps within the projecting
wings, serves as a terrace allowing views across the bowling green and gardens towards
the House and land beyond the site to the east. Steps at the south end of the bowling
green descend to a shrubbery-enclosed lawn with a centrally placed granite sundial
(listed grade II*, originally located on the formal terraces south of the House) c
65m south-west of the House (ibid). From the third of the western terraces, plain
stone steps (listed grade II*) ascend to the cedar walk, a sloping grass walk or glade
flanked by mature cedars, which leads to the Tea House (listed grade II*). A central
room with a fireplace and other fittings is flanked to north and south by a semicircular
roofed arcade supported by granite Tuscan columns. The arcade ends to south-east and
north-east in granite ashlar walls ornamented with niches, while the final bays of
each side of the arcade have been converted in the late C20 into service rooms. The
building has a hipped roof of Cotswold stone slabs, which rises to a peaked roof over
the central room. The Tea House has an axial vista down the western terraces to the
House, while the cedar walk overlooks the park to the south.
Stone steps at the south-east corner of the carriage court lead down to a gravelled
terrace which runs below the south facade of the House. The recess between the south-east
and south-west wings is enclosed to the south by a low granite balustrade and convex
semicircular stone steps ascend to a terrace paved with granite flags. The principal
south terrace is terminated to the east by a pitch-roofed granite garden house which
has a view from a mullioned window in its east wall across the kitchen garden. Steps
descend below the garden house to the kitchen garden, and a further terrace below
the east facade of the House. A croquet lawn extends south of the House, and is separated
from the gravelled terrace by low stone walls and box hedges. To east and west the
croquet lawn is flanked by slightly raised herbaceous borders and gravel walks approached
from the south terrace by short flights of stone steps and supported by low granite
retaining walls. The east and west walks are aligned on an identical pair of single-storey,
square stone gazebos or summerhouses surmounted by low pyramid roofs and with elliptical-arched
doorways. The gazebos stand to the east and west of a centrally placed circular lily
pool surrounded by a granite kerb and gravel walk. A rusticated stone plinth in the
centre of the pool formerly supported a bronze statue of a naked, helmeted youth carrying
a spear by Derwent Wood (absent 1998). The pool lies in front of a semicircular exedra
defined by plain granite posts linked by horizontal iron bars which served as a support
for climbing plants and roses and terminated the vista across the croquet lawn from
the House. A centrally placed wrought-iron gate and overthrow is supported by granite
piers with ball finials, and leads to a flight of stone steps flanked by a pair of
Irish yews. The steps descend to the sundial court, a garden with a sunken circular
area originally focused on the granite sundial now located to the south of the bowling
green. Banks to the north, west and east of the sundial court are planted with mixed
shrubs and specimen trees, and retained by rustic granite walls which were originally
planted as a wall garden. The retaining walls to the lower sundial lawn were similarly
planted, and to the south, the garden was originally enclosed by a yew hedge. All
the structural elements of the formal terraces south of the House, including the missing
statue by Derwent Wood, are listed grade II*.
A serpentine walk ascends from the north-west corner of the sundial court to the drive
and western terraces, while to the south walks lead through an area of lawns and informal
shrubbery to the C19 lake c 160m south-east of the House. A walk around the lake passes
through specimen rhododendrons, azaleas and other trees and shrubs, to reach a small
rectangular granite rubble summerhouse (listed grade II*) c 270m south-east of the
House. The summerhouse has a hipped, thatched roof supported by monolithic granite
piers, while the interior is lined with oak panelling and has a simple bench seat
overlooking the lake. South-east and east of the lake Mawson created a bog garden
around the stream which forms the outflow from the lake. A rustic oak bridge carried
a path over the stream, while the lake-side walk was carried to the east side of the
lake on a low timber bridge with simple rail parapets. A series of small cascades
in the stream and mature conifers to the north-east of the lake survive from Mawson's
scheme. The pleasure grounds around the lake are separated from the park to the west
by metal estate fences.
PARK Lying to the south-west of the House and to the north-west and south-east of
the principal drive, the park was developed by Mawson c 1900 from an area of paddocks
and agricultural land. Known in the early C20 as The Lawn (OS 1905), the park remains
pasture with scattered, mainly deciduous trees, with areas of plantation and shrubbery
adjacent to the lodge to the south-west, and the south-east boundary with the pleasure
grounds. An ornamental clump placed by Mawson lies c 240m south-south-west of the
House in the south-east section of parkland, while the western boundary is screened
from the adjacent public road by mixed trees and hedgerow shrubs.
KITCHEN GARDEN The irregularly shaped kitchen garden lies on the east-facing slope
immediately below the service road to the east of the House. The kitchen garden is
entered by an arched door set in the wall opposite steps descending from the garden
house at the east end of the south terrace. Enclosed by granite rubble walls c 3m
high (listed grade II; some sections of wall repaired 1998), Mawson's kitchen garden
was laid out with a grid-pattern of walks which were lined with ornamental timber
and iron fruit espalier supports and arches. Traces of these structures remain today
(1998). At the north end of the garden a series of glasshouses and frames with associated
structures were built, including two vinerys, a palm house and a house for ericaceous
plants. Remains of these glass, timber and granite or brick structures survive, together
with the granite men's shed, tool shed, mushroom and forcing shed, seed store, potting
shed and two-storey boiler room (all listed grade II). To the north-west a square-plan
fruit room stands adjacent to a semicircular wall-fountain and reservoir (all listed
grade II). Enclosed by granite rubble walls, the reservoir was fed by a bronze lion's-mask
spout on the monumental keystone (Mawson and Mawson 1926) of an arched panel which
forms part of the rear wall to the structure. The bronze spout is now removed, and
the pool dry (1998). A further arched door north of the fountain leads to the service
yard north of the House. The kitchen garden is no longer cultivated (1998).
REFERENCES
T H Mawson and E P Mawson, The Art and Craft of Garden Making, (5th edn 1926), pp
42, 44-5, 48, 78, 89, 154, 223, 247, 393-400 T H Mawson, The Life and Work of an English
Landscape Architect (1927), pp 46, 62, 69, 74 Country Life, 160 (10 June 1976), p
1579 G Beard, The Life and Work of a Northern Landscape Architect Thomas H Mawson
1861-1933 (1978), pp 11, 66-7 H Jordan, Thomas Hayton Mawson, (unpublished doctoral
thesis, Univ of London 1988) B Cherry and N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Devon
(1989), pp 916-17 S Pugsley (ed), Devon Gardens (1995), pp 106-24 T Gray, The Garden
History of Devon An Illustrated Guide to Sources (1995), p 243
Maps Tithe map for South Tawton parish, nd (c 1840), (Devon Record Office) T H Mawson,
Plan of a West Country Garden, c 1900 (see Mawson and Mawson 1926, fig 480)
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1886, published 1891 OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition
surveyed 1886, published 1888 2nd edition revised 1904, published 1905
Description written: April 1999 Amended: May 1999 Register Inspector: JML Edited:
July 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.