| Identification and description | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | WROTHAM PARK | ||||||||||||
| Location | 
                     
  | 
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| Localisation | Latitude: 51.675793 Longitude: -0.20098806 National Grid Reference: TQ2448998979  | 
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| Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden  Grade: II List Entry Number: 1000254 Date first listed: 11-Jun-1987  | 
               
A country house surrounded by an C18 landscape park with work by Lancelot Brown, substantially
               modified during the later C18 and C19. Early C19 pleasure grounds, laid out in formal
               gardenesque style, adjoin the house.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Some 150 acres (62.5ha) of the Pinchbank estate were bought by Admiral John Byng (1704-57)
               in 1750. At this time the house had a walled garden laid out with a formal water feature
               (estate map, 1750). Byng built the present building on approximately the same site
               as the earlier house in the mid 1750s, renaming the estate Wrotham Park after the
               Byngs' earlier home in Kent. The house passed to Admiral Byng's nephew, George (b
               1735), who employed Lancelot Brown (1716-83), with Samuel Lapidge as his surveyor,
               c 1765 to work on the park. Subsequently the park was enlarged in three phases until
               it had reached roughly its present size by 1840 (Tithe map). The pleasure grounds
               were laid out in the gardenesque style, possibly as early as 1820 (Inspector's Report),
               and have since been added to. The landscape has been added to by every generation
               of the Byng family since it was bought by Admiral Byng (ibid). The estate remains
               (1999) in private ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Wrotham Park lies between Potters Bar
               1.5km to the north and Barnet 1.5km to the south. The c 116ha site is bounded by public
               roads, with the A1000 Great North Road to the east, Dancers Hill Road to the north
               and Kitt's End Road to the west. Two broad, shallow valleys cross the park, rising
               from west to north-east and west to south-east respectively, from a lake on the west
               boundary. The house stands on a promontory between the two valleys. The immediate
               setting is rural, with C20 town development close by to the north, south and south-east.
               The M25 motorway runs roughly parallel and c 500m north of the north boundary. Long
               views extend westwards from the house and surrounding grounds across the adjacent
               countryside.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The north drive enters off Dancers Hill Road, 350m north-east
               of the house, through a curved gateway (probably SS Teulon 1865, listed grade II).
               Wrought-iron gates and railings are flanked by stone piers, in turn flanked by quadrant
               walls leading out to further piers. Bentley Heath Lodge (SS Teulon 1865, listed grade
               II) stands inside the gateway, to the west of the drive, a single-storey stone lodge.
               From here the drive curves south-west through the park, extending along the east side
               of the pleasure grounds. The drive passes the service court attached to the north
               side of the house, arriving at a carriage sweep on the east front, from where a broad
               flight of stone steps leads up to the central front door.
The south drive enters c 550m south-east of the house, at the London Lodges (late
               C18 or early C19, possibly Isaac Ware, enlarged late C20, listed grade II), standing
               either side of the entrance. The two small, square, single-storey stone blocks are
               linked by railings and two piers. From here the drive curves north-west through the
               park to the east front. A spur from this entrance leads south-west to the Home Farm
               and kitchen garden. A further lodge, Kitt's End Lodge (H Clutton 1860, listed grade
               II), lies 900m south of the house, marking the entrance of a former drive which led
               directly from Kitt's End Road to Home Farm and the kitchen garden. The two-storey
               lodge is of polychrome brick with stone dressings.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Wrotham Park (Isaac Ware 1754, with alterations of the later C18,
               C19 and C20, listed grade II*) lies north-east of the centre of the park. The three-storey
               central block is flanked by wings terminating in octagonal pavilions. The west, garden
               front is ornamented with a two-storey portico at piano nobile level, onto which the
               central garden door opens. A curved, stone, two-armed staircase sweeps down from the
               piano nobile to ground level. This house replaced an earlier one.
The service yard (1810, listed grade II* with the house), including the stables, lies
               adjacent to the north of the house. The brick stable block is semicircular, with extended
               arms, and mid C19 low service court additions extending south from this to the house.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens enclose the house to the west, south and
               north, extending north into the pleasure grounds. A path runs along the west front,
               reached from the house via the staircase leading down from the piano nobile, with
               steps leading down to a rectangular lawn (in the C19 laid out as a rose garden, R
               Byng pers comm, August 2000) enclosed by further paths, overlooking the park and lake
               beyond. The south end of the path turns east, extending eastwards beneath the south
               front, with an informal lawn planted with mature trees to the south.
From the west front the path leads north into the informal pleasure grounds, bounded
               to the north by Dancers Hill Road. The c 15ha pleasure grounds, planted with mature
               trees and laid out in gardenesque style, are crossed by a network of paths, with a
               serpentine lake at the centre. The area is laid out with sunk flower gardens, picturesque
               tree plantings, collections of exotic plants, shrubberies, ponds decorated with pudding
               stone and a sunk walk. Formerly a mid C19, iron-framed orangery in Gothic style stood
               70m north of the stable block, but this was dismantled in the 1980s. A stone mausoleum
               (1880, listed grade II) with a domed roof stands 400m north-west of the house, within
               a railed enclosure. From here a path leads west through the wooded belt enclosing
               the park.
PARK The park is divided into west and east sections by the pleasure grounds and south
               drive, with a third, southern section lying south of Home Farm and the kitchen garden.
               It is largely enclosed by belts of trees, through which formerly ran the path from
               the pleasure grounds encircling the whole park, elements of which still remain (2000).
               The west and east sections contain single specimens and clumps of mature park trees.
               The west section, generally sloping down to the west, is dominated by the roughly
               triangular lake lying adjacent to the west boundary, encircled by the walk from the
               pleasure grounds.
It appears that during the late C19 and early C20 (OS) the path which extended west
               and south through the perimeter belts from the northern pleasure grounds continued
               through the whole of the perimeter belt system, returning to complete the circuit
               at the north end of the pleasure grounds.
Home Farm (1854, farm buildings listed grade II) lies some 400m south of the house,
               enclosed by the park, close to the west side of the kitchen garden. Dairy Cottage,
               Steward's House and Garden Cottage (all 1856, listed grade II) lie between the farm
               buildings and the kitchen garden, each with brick garden walls enclosing their individual
               gardens. South of the farm lies the southern section of the park, laid to open arable
               and enclosed by the perimeter belt planting, with a further lake with an island in
               the western half.
The east half of the park is laid to pasture and contains many mature parkland trees,
               with an oval pond at the north side close to a cricket pitch. The western half of
               this area overlooks the east front of the house below to the west, with beyond this
               extensive views westwards to distant countryside. An icehouse formerly lay in a circular
               clump 200m east of the house.
A survey of the old park and gardens was prepared for George Byng by Samuel Lapidge
               in 1765, Lapidge acting as Lancelot Brown's surveyor. Brown notes that he himself
               visited the place, but gives no further details (Stroud 1975). A letter of 1773 from
               Admiral Lord Howe invites Brown to Wrotham as 'my ambition is to benefit by your lights'.
               A plan of the park before 1780 (Inspector's Report) shows the park largely confined
               to the area west of a line between the south and north entrances to the park, and
               north of the kitchen garden. The area was planted with several circular clumps, with
               belts along the north and south boundaries, and only two clumps on the west boundary.
               The park enclosed a kidney-shaped pleasure ground to the north, west and south of
               the house. A small pond occupied the site of the present lake close to the west boundary.
The park was subsequently enlarged in three phases. During the first phase, following
               the enclosure of Enfield Chase in 1778, George Byng was allotted the area lying to
               the east of a line approximating to that of the present drive. During the second,
               early C19 phase, when the park was owned by George Byng II, the highway bounding the
               north side of the park was diverted to its present position from a point immediately
               east of Norfolk Lodge Farm to the present Bentley Heath Lodge opposite Bentley Heath
               Lane. During the third expansion phase, in the second half of the C19, the property
               then adjoining Wrotham Park to the south was purchased from Mr Barroneau and the substantial
               house which it comprised was demolished and the present farm buildings erected in
               its place in 1855 (R Byng pers comm, August 2000).
KITCHEN GARDEN The square kitchen garden lies 400m south of the house, east of Home
               Farm, set in woodland to the north and east. It is enclosed by 2(3m high red-brick
               walls (C18, listed grade II), with openings on the west side. An extensive range of
               lean-to glasshouses stands on the inside of the north wall.
REFERENCES
Country Life, 44 (9 November 1918), pp 404-9; (23 November 1918), pp 458-66 Victoria
               History of the County of Middlesex 5, (1976), p 289 D Stroud, Capability Brown (1975
               edn), p 245 B Cherry and N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Hertfordshire (1977),
               pp 410-11 Wrotham Park: Inspector's Report, (English Heritage 1988)
Maps An exact plan of the Estate belonging to the Honourable John Byng Esq, Vice-Admiral,
               situate at Kick's End in the Parish of South Mimms, 1750 (private collection) Tithe
               map for Potters Bar parish, 1839 (London Metropolitan Archive)
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1877 2nd edition published 1897 3rd edition
               published 1919 OS 25" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1865
Description written: April 1999 Amended: September 2000 Register Inspector: SR Edited:
               October 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.