Identification and description | |||||||||||||
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Name | HEASELANDS | ||||||||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 50.989661 Longitude: -0.13287495 National Grid Reference: TQ 31140 22799 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1000275 Date first listed: 01-Jun-1984 |
A mid to late C20 plantsman's garden with formal elements and extensive ornamental
woodland.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
A house and park were established at Heaselands by 1874 (OS 1st edition). In 1898,
Sir Alexander D Kleinwort began to form the present family estate, his son, Mr Ernest
Kleinwort coming with his wife to live at Heaselands in 1932. He rebuilt the house
and, from 1934 until his death in the late 1970s, designed and laid out the gardens,
influenced by neighbouring Sussex gardens such as Sheffield Park (qv) and by the writings
of the landscape architect Richard Sudell (1900-68). Heaselands later became the home
of his son, Sir Richard Kleinwort and the estate remains (1998) in private ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Heaselands lies adjacent to the west
side of Isaacs Lane, which forms the A273, some 2.5km north of Burgess Hill and 1.5km
south of Haywards Heath. The 22ha registered site comprises c 2ha of formal gardens
and lawns adjacent to the house, 16ha of ornamental woodland, water gardens and a
small area of parkland, and c 4ha of paddocks and kitchen gardens. The site slopes
gently to the south-west and is cut north-east to south-west through the centre by
a narrow stream valley which becomes progressively deeper and steep-sided through
the south-west half of the site. The roughly triangular site is enclosed along its
north-west and east boundaries by mixed shelter belts, the eastern belt, dominated
by pine and rhododendron, abutting Isaacs Lane. To the south, the ornamental woodland
merges into the woodland of Great Wood, beyond which the high crest of the South Downs,
some 9km distant, may be glimpsed. The surrounding landscape in the immediate vicinity
of the site comprises gently rolling, well-wooded mixed farmland.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES Heaselands is approached from Isaacs Lane in the north-east
corner, a gravelled drive flanked along part of its length by exotic conifers and
tall shrubbery entering between stone gate piers and following a gentle S-shaped curve
1km south-westwards to the forecourt on the principal, east front of the house. The
forecourt is enclosed on its east side by an extensive sandstone rockery, laid out
in the 1930s and planted with dwarf conifers and a wide range of acid-loving shrubs.
The present drive was laid out by Ernest Kleinwort c 1963 for use in preference to
the former drive which, flanked by lawns dotted with specimen tees and shrubs, enters
through wrought-iron gates beside a lodge (built between 1898 and 1909) some 0.8km
further south along Isaacs Lane, and follows a westerly course to the east front.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING The present house sits on level ground at the west-centre of the
estate. It is H-shaped in plan and built in soft pink and brown brick with two storeys
and a further attic storey below a pitched roof, which is partly of Horsham slate
and partly tiled. The entrance front has two projecting gabled bays, one of which,
with the two-storey entrance porch at the south end, is half-timbered. The house was
rebuilt in its present form in 1933(4 on the site of a previous farmhouse, shown on
the 1st edition OS map of 1874 and enlarged by 1909. To the immediate west of the
house, ranges of brick outbuildings, stables and coach houses form two open courtyards.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The formal and ornamental woodland gardens lie on the
slopes to the south-west, south and south-east of the house. The garden front opens
from a central loggia onto a raised terrace, laid out with stone paving and two small,
lozenge-shaped lawns, and surrounded by a low parapet. South from the terrace and
on the central axis of the loggia, a flight of stone steps and a path lead 10m down
to the rectangular Sunken Garden. Laid out by 1937, its sandstone walls enclose raised
perimeter beds, planted in 1997 as rose borders, and a central lily pool flanked by
four quarters of lawn surrounded by stone-paved paths. The Sunken Garden is set within
the broad sweep of the main lawn, which extends some 140m southwards from the terrace
down to the stream valley, its steepening lower slopes dotted with specimen trees
of mixed ages and a few island beds of low shrubbery. West of the Sunken Garden the
lawn is enclosed by tall shrubbery with mature pine trees, against which sits a small
brick and tile-roofed tea house while to the far south-west a stone-walled ha-ha separates
the lawn from the Park Field beyond.
On the south-east side of the lawn, enclosing borders of mixed shrubbery with trees
conceal several self-contained gardens, laid out on terraces cut into the southward
slope. A path from the east end of the Sunken Garden leads to a further, stone and
slate-roofed garden house, on the south side of which an oak door leads into the Walled
Garden. Constructed in 1948 on the site of a former tennis court and enclosed on its
north and west sides by brick walls, its raised borders are edged with sandstone blocks
and planted with low-growing rhododendrons and conifers. Beyond the tall, clipped
yew hedge which encloses its east side is a tennis court laid out in 1937 and surrounded
by further clipped yew. On the immediate south side of the Walled Garden and tennis
court and entered down circular steps from the lawn is a rectangular former Rose Garden,
originally a children's garden and now (1997) laid out with four beds of lavender
varieties around a central sundial. Steps on the south side lead down into the Paved
Garden, surrounded by clipped yew hedges and redesigned in the late 1970s from a former
herbaceous garden to the present twelve square beds set in stone paving and planted
now (1997) with roses and, at the east end, with herbaceous peonies. South of the
Paved Garden and entirely surrounded with shrubbery is a walled enclosure containing
a swimming pool. The sheltered southward slope on the east side of these contained
gardens is planted as a Warm Garden with species including rhododendron, magnolia,
hydrangea and camellia.
South of the main lawn and enclosed gardens the west-flowing stream valley contains
the Water Gardens, constructed in 1957-8 as a series of linear ponds connected by
waterfalls and meandering lengths of stream. The surrounds of the three upper, larger
ponds are abundantly planted with exotic trees, shrubs and waterside plants while
the lowest pond and the westward continuation of the stream run beneath a canopy of
mature oak and pine underplanted with massed spring bulbs and clumps of evergreen
azaleas. On the south side of the stream valley, on ground rising more gently towards
the south-east boundary of the site, the Rhododendron Woodland, developed from 1957,
is planted with massed rhododendron beneath a canopy of oak woodland, shown established
in 1874 (OS 1st edition), mixed with pine planted in the mid C20. In the far south-east
corner of the woodland, just to the north of the boundary with Heasewood Farm, an
open, c 100m x 30m glade is now (1997) sown for wild flowers; on its north side, on
the site of a former croquet lawn, island beds containing a National Collection of
Knaphill azaleas are laid out.
PARK A small area of parkland, the Park Field, extends for some 250m south-westwards
from the house on a gentle slope from the ha-ha to the boundary woodland. It is dotted
with a few isolated conifers of mixed ages, planted since 1909 (OS 3rd edition).
KITCHEN GARDEN The kitchen garden lies to the north of the house and the northernmost
service courtyard. Of the two rectangular, brick-walled enclosures, the westernmost
is now (1997) planted with orchard trees in lawn while the easternmost contains an
indoor swimming pool, constructed in the 1960s.
OTHER LAND To the north-west of the present drive and on land between the drive and
the eastern boundary along Isaacs Lane, some 3.5ha of land are laid out as grassed
paddocks enclosed by post and rail fencing.
REFERENCES
Country Life, 140 (8 September 1966), pp 536-8 Heaselands, guidebook, (nd, c late
1970s) T Wright, Gardens of Britain 4, (1978), pp 151-2 Horticultural Week, (18 April
1986), pp 20-1 Heaselands, West Sussex: Inspector's Report, (English Heritage 1988)
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1874 2nd edition published 1899 3rd edition
published 1912 1938 edition OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1874 3rd edition
published 1910 1937 edition
Archival items Comprehensive notes and sketches made by Ernest Kleinwort during the
construction of the garden are held in a private collection. [Notes compiled from
this archive including references to Richard Sudell's Landscape Gardening (1933),
are contained in the Inspector's Report on Heaselands.]
Description written: November 1998 Register Inspector: VCH Edited: June 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.