English Country House

The English country house is generally accepted as a large house or mansion, once in the ownership of an individual who also most likely owned another great house in the West End of London. Hence one moved from one's town house to one's country house. Country houses and stately homes are sometimes confused – while a country house is always in the country, a stately home can also be in a town. Apsley House, built for the Duke of Wellington at the corner of Hyde Park ('No. 1, London' it was called) is one example. Other country houses such as Ascott in Buckinghamshire were deliberately designed not to be stately, and to harmonise with the landscape, while some of the great houses such as Kedleston Hall and Holkham Hall were built as "power houses" to impress and dominate the landscape, and were certainly intended to be 'stately homes'. Today many former 'stately homes', while still country houses, are far from stately and most certainly not homes. The country house was not just a weekend retreat for aristocrats, but often a full time residence for the minor gentry who were a central node in the "squirearchy" that ruled Britain until the Reform Act of 1832 (as documented in The Purefoy Letters, 1735-53 by L G Mitchell). Even some of the formal business of the shire was transacted in the Hall.

Evolution of the English country house

The country houses of England have evolved over the last 500 years, before this time larger houses were more often than not fortified, reflecting the position of their owners as war lords or at least keepers of the peace. The Tudor period of stability in the country saw the first of the large unfortified mansions. Henry VIII's policy of the dissolution of the monasteries saw many former ecclesiastical properties turned over to the King's favourites who then converted them into private country houses, Woburn Abbey, Forde Abbey and many other mansions with Abbey or priory in their name often date from this period as private houses. It was during the later half of the reign of Elizabeth I and her successor James I that the first architect designed mansions, thought of today as epitomising the English country house began to make their appearance. Burly House, Longleat House, and Hatfield House are perhaps amongst the most well known. Hatfield House was one of the first houses in England to show the Italianate influences of the renaissance, which was eventually to see an final end of the turrets and towers gothic style hinting at castle architecture. By the reign of Charles I Inigo Jones and his form of Palladianism had changed the face of British domestic architecture completely. While there was later various gothic revival styles, the palladian style in various forms, interrupted briefly by baroque, was to predominate until the late 18th century, when influenced by ancient Greek styles it gradually evolved into the neoclassicism championed by such architects as Robert Adam. Some of the best known of England's country houses tend to have been built by one architect at one particular time, Montacute House, Chatsworth House, and Blenheim Palace are examples. It is interesting that while the latter two are ducal palaces, Montacute although built by a Master of the Roles to Queen Elizabeth I, spent the next 400 years in the occupation of his descendents, who were Gentry, without a London townhouse rather than aristocracy. They finally ran out of funds in the early 20th century However, the vast majority of the lesser known English country houses, often owned by both gentry and aristocracy, are an evolution of one or more styles with facades and wings in various styles in a mixture of high architecture, often as interpreted by a local architect or surveyor, and determined by practicality as much as the whims of architectural taste, Rowsham House was redesigned by the fashionable William Kent only to be quickly and drastically altered altered to accommodate space for the owners twelve children. Cannons Ashby, home of the family of the poet John Dryden, exemplifies this, a medieval farmhouse, enlarged in the Tudor era around a courtyard, given grandiose plaster ceilings in the Stewart period and then given Georgian facades in the 18th century, the whole is a glorious mismatch of styles and fashions, which seemlessly blend together, this could be called the true English country house; Wilton House one of England grandest houses is in a remarkably similar vein, except while the Drydens, mere Squires, at Cannons Ashby employed a local architect, at Wilton the mighty Earls of Pembroke employed the finest architects of the day first Holbein, a 150 years later Inigo James and then Wyatt followed by Chambers, each employed a different style of architecture, seemingly unaware of the design of the wing around the next corner. These varying "improvements", often criticised at the time, today are the qualities which make English country houses unique, no where else in the world would an elite class have allowed, or indeed pursued, such an indifference to style.

Power houses and family homes

  inhabitants of the English country house have become collectively referred to as the Ruling class, because this is exactly what they did in varying degrees.  Whether by holding high political influence and power in national government, or in the day to day running of their own localities, in such offices as magistrates or occasionally even clergy.  These aristocrats, continued, in diminishing degrees, to frequently hold the highest offices until well into the second half of the 20th century.  Sir Winston Churchill, and Sir Alec Douglas-Home were the last Prime Ministers to spring from this class.   So necessary was the country house deemed to be, that following the election of the first Labour Government in 1921, Lord Lee of Farham donated his country house Chequers to the nation for the use of a Prime Minister who might not possess one of his own.   Chequers still fulfils that need today as do both Chevening House and Dorneywood country houses donated for sole use of high ranking ministers of the crown. 

Zenith of the English country house

During the 18th and 19th centuries to the highest echelons of British society the country house served as a place for relaxing, hunting and running the country with one's equals at the end of the week. However, there were many Squires who live permanently on their country estates seldom visiting London at all. The country house was the centre of its own world, providing employment to literally hundreds of people in the vicinity of its estate. In previous eras, when state benefits were unheard of, those working on an estate were the among the most fortunate receiving secured employment and rent free accommodation. At the summit of these fortunate people were the indoor staff of the country house. Until the 20th century unlike many of their contemporaries they slept in proper beds, wore well made adequate clothes and received three proper meals a day, plus a small wage. In an era when many still died for lack of medicine, or malnutrition the long working hours were a small price to pay. The movie Gosford Park, the reality series The Edwardian Country House and some episodes of the TV series Upstairs, Downstairs accurately recreated the stratified and repressed, but secure atmosphere of the English country house just surviving into the age of the automobile. Many aristocrats owned more than one country house, and would visit each according to the season. Grouse shooting in Scotland, pheasant shooting and fox hunting in England. The Earl of Rosebery, for instance had Dalmeny in Scotland, Mentmore Towers in Buckinghamshire and another near Epsom just for the racing season.

Decline

The slow decline of the English country house coincided with the rise of modern industry, which provided alternate means of employment for large numbers of people and contributed to upwardly mobile middle classes, but its ultimate demise began immediately following World War I. The huge staff required to maintain them had either left to fight and never return, departed to work in the munition factories, or to fulfil the void left by the fighting men in other workplaces. On the cessation of war of those who returned many left the countryside for better paid jobs in towns. The final blow for many country houses came following World War II; having been requisitioned during the war they were returned to the owners in poor repair. Many of whom having lost their heirs, if not in the immediately preceding war, then in World War I, were now paying far higher rates of tax, agricultural incomes from the accompanying estates, had dropped, thus the solution appeared to be to demolish the house, and sell its stone, fireplaces, and panelling; and this is exactly what happened to many of Britain's finest houses. Today, in Britain, country houses provide for a variety of needs. Many such as Montacute House, West Wycombe Park and Lyme Park are owned by public bodies including the National Trust and are open to the public as museums as part of the so called "Stately home industry". Some including Wilton House and Chatsworth House and many smaller houses such as Pencarrow in Cornwall and Rousham House in Oxfordshire are still owned by the families who built them, retain their treasures and are open during summer months to the public. Fewer still are owned by the original families and are not open to the public: Compton Wynyates is one. Easton Neston in Northamptonshire, one of the last of the architecturally important country houses never to have been opened to public viewing, has just (2004) been offered for sale by Lord Hesketh

Today's English country house

The majority have fallen to the deprivations of modern life and become schools, hospitals, and prisons. Reduced from being 'Stately Homes' they are neither stately or homes. Many, for example Cliveden and Hartwell House have become luxury hotels, and many more less luxurious hotels. These are among the fortunate few. In Britain during the 1950s and early 1960s thousands of country houses were demolished. Today owning a 'Country House' can be a mixed blessing. Usually listed as a building of historic interest, they can only be maintained under Government supervision, often interpreted by the owners as interference as it is usually the most costly method that the Government inspectors insist upon. This system does however ensure that all work is correctly and authentically done, the negative side is that many owners cannot afford the work so a roof remains leaking for the sake of a cheap roof tile. For all the hardships of owning a country house, many people still aspire to own one. Those that do often labour night and day, to retain the houses they feel privileged to have inherited.

Reference

*Girouard, Mark. Life in the English Country House : a social and architectural history details the impact of social change on design

 

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