Identification and description | |||||||||||||
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Name | HUNSTANTON HALL | ||||||||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 52.940728 Longitude: 0.52068517 National Grid Reference: TF 69483 41122 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001006 Date first listed: 18-Sep-1987 |
Walled and moated gardens developed from the C16 onwards, set around a moated house
of C15 origins within a park which originated as a deer park in the C15, was embellished
in the C17 and was greatly extended in the C19.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Hunstanton Hall was the ancestral home of the Le Strange family, one of the most powerful
Norfolk families in the C15 and C16. The brick gatehouse of the Hall was built in
1490 by Sir Roger Le Strange within a large deer park, and the main double-pile Hall
(destroyed by fire in the C19) was begun in 1578 by Sir Nicholas Le Strange. A map
of 1615 shows that the Hall stood at the northern end of the deer park, surrounded
by a series of three interconnecting moats with an orchard to the north and bowling
green to the south-east. Further alterations were undertaken between 1622 and 1626
by Thomas Thorpe for Sir Hamon Le Strange, including the building of a gateway and
two T-shaped wings to the courtyard, as well as alterations to the west moat and garden
walls. In c 1655 the Octagon pond and banqueting house, together with Park House,
were all constructed in the park. Sir Nicholas Le Strange made further alterations
to the gardens between the late C17 and early C18. Between 1750 and 1835 the Hall
was leased out or unoccupied for periods. Work continued in the park, which saw an
extensive planting programme between 1760 and 1779 when many of the plantations were
created. In 1835 the Hall was reinhabited by the family who made further additions,
greatly expanded the park and carried out major works in the gardens. Much of the
Hall was destroyed by fire in 1853 and another phase of restoration and alteration
was undertaken by Frederick Pready for the Le Strange family at the end of the C19.
The Hall was badly damaged by another fire in 1951 and subsequently divided into apartments
and sold, although the Le Strange family retained the park and part of the gardens.
During the 1990s the owner of the burned-out wing has undertaken extensive restoration
work. The site remains (1999) in divided private ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Hunstanton Hall lies c 2km inland from
the north Norfolk coast at Hunstanton, on the south-east edge of the village of Old
Hunstanton. The registered site covers c 182ha of which c 7ha lies inside the ha-ha.
It is bounded to the north-west by Old Hunstanton village and to the south-east by
Ringstead village. To the south lies the chalk downland of Ringstead Downs and to
the west lies farmland. The park is almost entirely enclosed by boundary woodlands
and plantations, with small gaps to the south and south-east looking over farmland.
The topography of the area and of the park is gently rolling land although a deep
esker valley and ridge runs through the southern end of the park from south-east to
north-west. A spring rises in the park feeding a watercourse which flows from the
higher ground in the south to the lowest point by the Hall in the north, augmented
by a series of drains which run into it as the land falls gently from both east and
west. Within the park are fine views from the West Belt, looking east over the park
towards Holly Mount. Views from Park House on Holly Mount looking west and north are
now (1999) obscured by tree growth, as is Park House itself which once acted as an
eyecatcher from other points in the park.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The main stone, Gothic-style gates (listed grade II) into
Hunstanton Park lie to the north in Old Hunstanton village, at the termination of
Church Road. They were built as part of the mid C19 improvements to the estate. The
drive passes Hall Cottage and turns east to run north of the Hall before turning south
to reach the C17 gateway (listed grade I) on the east front. A second drive enters
the park through a plantation on the eastern boundary, just outside Ringstead village.
The drive passes a small mid C19 carstone and slate lodge standing in woodland and
runs north-west to emerge in the park. There are glimpses of the body of the park
to the west although large plantations restrict the view until the Hall is seen c
350m to the north-west, when the park view also opens out. The drive joins the north
drive beside the gateway on the east front. A third entrance, in the south-west corner
of the park, passes West Lodge (listed grade II), a single-storey L-shaped building
of carstone and flint under a slate roof, and runs north-east along the line of the
watercourse to join the other drives east of the Hall.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Hunstanton Hall (listed grade I) is a moated country house of chequer-work
clunch and carstone with some knapped flint and brick ranged around three sides of
a courtyard. It is entered from the east, through a C17 arched and ornamented gateway
by Thomas Thorpe which leads into a grass outer courtyard bounded to the south by
an embattled carstone wall (listed grade I) and to the north by a C17 two-storey stable
block of carstone under a pantile roof. The moat forms the western boundary of the
courtyard and the Hall is entered through a C15 red-brick gatehouse which spans the
moat. This is flanked by C17 wings of carstone with brick battlements built in Gothic
and Jacobean style, possibly by the stone mason William Edge. Beyond the gatehouse
is a further courtyard, open to the south-west, in the centre of which stands the
porch of the former C16 range (listed grade I), free-standing since the fire of 1853.
The porch is built of stone, chequer-work stone, and flint in the Jacobean Mannerist
style. The north wing remained roofless after the fire of 1951 until 1988 when the
owner undertook extensive restorations. At the end of the north-west return is a three-storey,
High Victorian domestic range added by Frederick Pready in 1873. Behind this is a
two-storey range said to be part of the earliest house and a c 1900 single-storey
brick block. The south wing incorporates an orangery and the south-west return matches
that of the north-west. Attached to the north wing and running north-west, then west
along the moat, and then south-east, is a carstone garden wall dated 1622 on the western
section.
To the north of the Hall is a range of working and service buildings, including a
rubble carstone, brick and clunch C17 barn (listed grade II); the square stable court
(listed grade II) with central brick arch and cupola with clock, designed by Frederick
Pready in 1873; the square carstone and tile game larder (listed grade II); and the
Stable Court Cottage (listed grade II).
Seat of the Le Strange family from the time of Domesday until after the Second World
War, Hunstanton Hall was built by Sir Roger Le Strange in 1490, enlarged by Sir Nicholas
in 1578, and again by Thomas Thorpe and/or William Edge for Sir Hamon in 1622(6. Further
alterations were undertaken by Frederick Pready in the latter part of the C19 when
new service ranges were added to the north.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens and pleasure grounds lie principally to the
west of the Hall. The whole area is surrounded by a C19 ha-ha to south and west, which
becomes a wall along the northern boundary of the garden. The Hall is moated to east
and west, with a narrow water channel running from the east to the south-west and
a further broad pool to the north beyond the stables. The western moat wall is dated
1622 and encloses a square garden area known as the Bowling Green. This was laid out
in the mid C19 with yew hedges, lawn, and formal bedding, a design much simplified
in the late C20. Beyond the wide west moat, 120m to the west of the Hall, is a second
enclosed garden compartment covering c 1ha. It is enclosed mainly by high mid C19
yew and beech hedges but to the north are walls (listed grade II) of red brick with
stone dressings, built in 1711 by Sir Nicholas Le Strange to enclose a formal ornamental
garden. The mid C19 garden was laid out by Henry Styleman-le Strange with a central
east/west walk lined with holly and herbaceous borders. The holly survives but otherwise
the internal layout is currently (1999) unmanaged and overgrown.
Outside the garden to the west is a 150m long raised terrace walk running north/south.
The walk is bounded on the park side by a ha-ha and is finished with bastions at the
north and south ends offering views across the park and glimpses of The Octagon. The
southern bastion is partly enclosed with yew hedging and contains two family graves.
Surrounding the enclosed garden to north and south is a woodland garden of beech,
holm oak, and conifers in variety, underplanted with yew, box, and holly and cut through
with winding paths. This area was developed during the mid C19 phase of work.
The brick walls are all that visibly remain of the C17 formal gardens which stood
on the west side of the Hall. The ha-ha, woodland walks, raised terrace, and bastions
all originate from the mid C19 phase of work, during which period part of the enclosed
area was used as a kitchen garden. Small private gardens have been created (late C20)
around some of the service buildings to the north since being sold as separate private
dwellings.
PARK Hunstanton Park contains extensive and numerous plantations, with open areas
of rolling parkland scattered with individual trees of a variety of ages but predominantly
of early C19 date. There are arable areas along the western and eastern edges and
on the rising ground south of Holly Mount. The boundary plantations are varied in
their planting with a high proportion of conifers, most notably Corsican pine and
holm oak mixed with beech, sweet chestnut, ash, oak, and sycamore, whilst the open
parkland is mainly planted with oaks in groups and as individuals. Holly Mount lies
900m south-south-east of the Hall. It is a steep piece of high ground on which stands
the brick and carstone ruins of Park House (listed grade II), built by Sir Hamon in
1623 as a hunting lodge and deerkeeper's house. It is known that Park House replaced
an earlier hunting tower which stood in the same position (Williamson 1998). Immediately
to the south-west of Holly Mount is a mixed stand of Monkey Puzzle, Coast Redwood,
and cedars, of early/mid C19 origin. Approximately 200m south of the Hall is the octagonal
carstone and brick banqueting house known as The Octagon (listed grade II*), constructed
on an island surrounded by an octagonal moat and reached by a small brick and stone
footbridge. Some 30m south of this is a small rectangular pool lined with tiles known
as 'Grandfather's Bath', which feeds the octagonal pool that in turn feeds the Hall
moats. North of the Hall is a series of interconnecting pools and streams known as
the Mill Waters.
The park has its origins in the C15 deer park which lay to the south of the original
hall. It covered c 80ha by 1615 and although it was the subject of planting, embellishment
and removal of internal divisions, remained much the same size until the mid C19 when
it was considerably expanded to its present size by Henry Styleman-le Strange.
KITCHEN GARDEN Part of the enclosed garden lying 150m west of the Hall and described
above, was developed as a kitchen garden in the mid C19. The areas either side of
the central holly and herbaceous walk were used for fruit and vegetable production
and a range of derelict frames, stores, and glasshouses survive. Part of the area
has been planted with Norway spruce but the whole is presently (1999) overgrown and
unmanaged.
REFERENCES
J Grigor, The Eastern Arboretum (1841), pp 198-9 Country Life, 8 (18 August 1900),
pp 208(14; 59 (10 April 1926), pp 552-9; (17 April 1926), pp 586-95 N Pevsner, The
Buildings of England: North-west and South Norfolk (1962), pp 213-14 J Kenworthy-Browne
et al, Burke's and Savills Guide to Country Houses III, (1981), p 153 J Garden History
11, (1991), nos 1 and 2, pp 65-6 Hunstanton Hall, (UEA report 1992) T Williamson,
The archaeology of the landscape park, BAR Brit Ser 268 (1998), pp 124, 252-3
Maps J Aram, A Map of Hunstanton Hall and park, 1765 (Le Strange OA3, M5(6), (Norfolk
Record Office) W Faden, A new topographical map of the county of Norfolk, 1797 (Norfolk
Record Office) A Bryant, Map of the county of Norfolk, 1826 (Norfolk Record Office)
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1891 2nd edition published 1906 3rd edition
published 1929 OS 25" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published 1905
Archival items The extensive Le Strange family papers are held in the Norfolk Record
Office.
Description written: March 1999 Amended: October 2000 Register Inspector: EMP Edited:
March 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.