| Identification and description | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | WARBROOK HOUSE | ||||||
| Location | 
                     
  | 
               ||||||
| Localisation | Latitude: 51.349777 Longitude: -0.89689195 National Grid Reference: SU7691961766  | 
               ||||||
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| Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden  Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1000249 Date first listed: 31-May-1984  | 
               
Formal pleasure grounds and a geometric designed landscape with long axial vistas,
               laid out c 1724 by the architect John James to his own design around his small country
               villa, according to the principles of d'Argenville.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
John James (c 1673-1746), surveyor of HM Works, is well known for The Theory and Practice
               of Gardening, published in 1712. He translated this from a French book by A J Dezallier
               d'Argenville (1680-1765) and the two hundred subscribers who contributed towards the
               costs of its production included many landowners whose own landscape gardens subsequently
               became renowned and influential. After a successful and lucrative career in which
               he succeeded Wren as Surveyor to the Fabric of St Paul's in 1723, James purchased
               land at Warbrook in 1724. This enabled him to fully implement his ideal of a country
               estate using the theories propounded in d'Argenville's text and his experience gained
               through his various architectural commissions and appointments. The latter included
               Orleans House, Twickenham for James Johnston, Secretary of State for Scotland under
               William III, and Appledurcombe, Isle of Wight (qv) for James Worsley, and between
               c 1700 and 1705 he was working at nearby Herriard Park (qv) for Thomas Jervoise.
Following the loss of his son and wife in the 1730s and financial loss after the failure
               of his brother's printing business in 1738, James moved back to Greenwich. After his
               death in 1746 the Warbrook estate was sold to maintain his widowed daughter-in-law.
               The ownership passed through a rapid succession of ownerships: James Comyn, then Sir
               George Nares and his son, and, during the late C18, John Bishop. James' layout of
               field boundaries, axial drives, and canals seems to have changed little by the mid
               C19 (OS), with many of these features surviving into the mid C20.
Augustus Stapleton, Private Secretary to Lord Canning, acquired Warbrook in 1838,
               introducing changes during his period of residence which made the grounds more informal
               and private. The most significant changes were the closing of the major north to south
               and east to west drives and the construction of a new lodge on Reading Road. Ancillary
               buildings and stables (and possibly a farm) south of the house were removed and Warbrook
               Farm was laid out on the north-west boundary of the estate.
During the early C20 the house was let to Lady Glass. In the 1920s the Stapletons
               sold the estate to the artist William Ranken who undertook extensive restoration work
               to the house, but the gardens seem to have remained unchanged (Architectural Review
               1923).
Mrs Humphreys-Owen had bought the property by 1935 and made substantial alterations
               to the house, commissioning Lord Gerald Wellesley and Trenwith Wells to build an extension
               to the north and a double-height sleeping loggia to the south. The work included changes
               to the formal gardens, a sunken garden, and an octagonal lily pool. The new gardens
               were designed and constructed by William Wood of Taplow.
The site has undergone major changes in the mid C20 with the conversion of the house
               to a conference and business centre. This has involved major building additions and
               the introduction of service areas and other facilities. The site remains (1999) in
               private corporate ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Warbrook House lies directly to the
               west of the A327, Reading to Farnborough road, at the south end of Eversley village,
               some 500m from the village centre. This road forms the north-east boundary to the
               site, with St Neot's Road to the west and the Bramshill to Eversley road to the south.
               The house was built on what was originally heathland, an expanse of low, flat acidic
               land which was part of Eversley Common. Warbrook lies 2.5km west of the village of
               Eversley Cross along a direct line with the Cross and Eversley Centre, this axis continuing
               through the formal gardens and to the west of St Neot's Road through woodland. This
               extensive design links Warbrook out into the landscape and countryside, beyond the
               estate and the modern ownership boundaries. The water table lies close to the ground
               surface and the site is crossed by a network of ditches and small streams, hence its
               name Warbrook.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The entrance drive leads off the A327 180m to the north-east
               of the house and leads south-south-west across the site, passing some 40m to the east
               of the house before meeting a drive which runs from west to east from Park House,
               a late C20 residential block, to a point where the drive turns southwards to run parallel
               to a stream to the lodge on the south boundary of the site. The present drive alignments
               are the result of C19 and C20 alterations to the original drives which constituted
               the axis lines of James¿ C18 formal geometric layout. James' north to south axis ran
               south for c 1km from the junction between Eversley Street and Warbrook Lane while
               the east to west axis ran for 2.35km from Eversley Cross, across Eversley Centre,
               Eversley Chase and an area of common known as the Great A. These two lines, which
               set up the main organising principles for the entire landscape, were lined by oak
               avenues and met at the head of a large oval coach sweep which led to the east front
               of the house (OS drawing, 1792; Parish map, 1837; Tithe map, 1842). Thus the original
               view of the entrance front to Warbrook was framed through a grid of oak trees but
               approached on a more gentle oval sweep. Both axes can still (1999) be discerned in
               the field, and the line of the avenue across the Great A survives.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Warbrook House (listed grade I) sits at the centre of the landscape,
               aligned with James' east to west axis and, prior to the alteration of the drives,
               the major north to south axis. The central surviving section of James' Warbrook house
               is a prime example of a small Palladian villa or 'box' set within a geometric landscape
               layout.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The original forecourt to the east front survives, flanked
               by walls and defined on its eastern edge by the balustraded C18 ha-ha. The front door
               is reached by a short flight of eight stone steps from the forecourt, with the William
               Collier sundial, the only surviving garden ornament from James' layout, set axially
               across from this main entrance. To the east of the house, on the main entrance front,
               field evidence including surviving trees indicates that the area around the oval coach
               sweep was laid out as an elaborate oak grove. 
The main east to west axis continues through the house and extends westwards to form
               the axis of symmetry around which the formal gardens on the west side of the house
               are laid out. The principal features surviving from James' original layout are the
               canals, although these have changed in size over the centuries. The principal long
               canal lies on the central design axis with groves of trees on either side. A vista
               along this canal through the flanking groves of trees extends from a raised entrance
               door on the garden front of the house, and the return view from the far end of the
               canal focuses on the house. This central canal is linked by a perpendicular canal
               issuing into two further basins, one which lies to the north and the other to the
               south. The feeder stream for this system bounds the lawns on three sides.
By 1898 (OS) the formal canals had been partially filled in, with the southern basin
               truncated and the northern basin and north-east section of the perpendicular canal
               removed. The two basins seem to have originally extended up to the level of the house.
               They were reinstated early in the C20, although not back to their original lengths
               (they remain 4m short). There is now (1999) a small fountain at the eastern end of
               the central canal. The Tithe map (1842) shows a rectangular pond (stew pond?) lying
               at an oblique, north-west angle to the north basin and although this is not extant,
               some areas of open water and marsh indicate its position and extent.
The outer edges of the canal arms, which delineate the area in which the former parterre
               garden was set, seem to have been lined with a 1-1.5m yew hedge some 2.5m from the
               water. Some of these yews have survived and now appear as mature trees (1990s).
The woodland groves to either side of the long canal are pierced by vistas which radiate
               from the house. Field evidence and the surviving symmetrical pattern of the layout
               suggest that there were originally three radiating vistas forming a patte d'oie. Only
               two of these remain, that down the central canal and the south-west diagonal alley
               through trees with its surviving vista to the house. The alignment of the north-west
               vista can be traced but as it would now terminate on the C19 Warbrook Grange farm,
               it may be that this vista was removed in the C19. The woodland groves are mainly oak
               with hazel coppice and late C19/early C20 group plantings of rhododendron, bamboo,
               and poplars. A perimeter walk still leads around the outer extent of the grove.
Between the canals and the house, the broad open lawn area leading up to the west
               front and surrounded on three sides by the canals was originally the site of a parterre
               garden. It is not known when this was grassed over but its existence can be deduced
               from the principles of garden layout presented in The Theory and Practice of Gardening
               as well as from archaeological survey.
A series of gardens was added to the south of the house on the site of the stable
               (and farm?) buildings (Tithe map, 1842). Initially the area had been laid out very
               simply with a path running through the area from the south-west corner of the house
               (OS 1910). This was developed during the 1930s by Mrs Humphreys-Owen as a series of
               formal gardens including a sunken garden and a lily pool (photographs of 1939 in guidebook).
               The lily pool has been redeveloped (mid C20) as a swimming pool with new facilities.
               The sunken garden survives and provides an area for formal bedding.
PARK In the fields west of the house there are surviving clumps of pine and oak composing
               views from the formal gardens and remnants of C18 boundaries. The woodland groves
               are separated from this area by a section of curved balustrade which terminates the
               western end of the long central canal. This balustrade was supposedly acquired during
               the 1930s from the demolition of Waterloo Bridge; another section stands at the end
               of the Great A, against the parkland boundary on the east.
To the east of the house, parkland extends right up to the A327. Originally this area
               directly to the east of the ha-ha fronting the house was laid out with axial avenues
               and an oak grove set within a small trapezoidal area of parkland. This then gave out
               directly onto Eversley Common. In 1868 (Inclosure map) parts of Eversley Common were
               formally enclosed as part of the estate; prior to this they had been a 'borrowed'
               landscape. Alterations to the drives were accompanied by a new footpath curving through
               Eversley Green, allowing pedestrians access through the estate from north to south,
               in compensation for the enclosure of the north to south drive. Probably also as part
               compensation for the loss of common land, the Great A was designated for recreation.
               The formal eastern approach leading from Eversley can still be discerned across this
               area. The formation of the road along the western boundary of the estate also took
               place at this time. Thus although these 1868 changes altered the layout of the park,
               the basic principle of grazed parkland remains today (1999) and the outlying field
               boundaries and general configuration of the area survive, or can be traced archaeologically.
To the south of Warbrook House a ha-ha separates the lawns on which Park House Training
               Room (1980s) now stands from farmed parkland to the south.
REFERENCES
Architectural Review, (May 1923) Country Life, 85 (11 March 1939), pp 250-4 H M Colvin,
               A Biographical Dictionary of English Architects 1660-1840 (1978), pp 536-40 K Bilikowski,
               Historic Parks and Gardens (1983) Warbrook House, Landscape Restoration and Management
               Plan, (Debois Landscape Survey 1991) Warbrook House, Landscape Restoration and Management
               Plan, (Kim Wilkie Environmental Design 1991) A History of Warbrook, guidebook, (Style
               Conferences nd)
Maps OS Surveyor's drawing, 1792 (British Library Maps) Map of the Parishes of Eversley
               and Bramshill in the County of Hants, 1837 (Hampshire Record Office) Tithe map for
               Eversley parish, 1842 (Hampshire Record Office) Eversley Inclosure Award, 1868 (Hampshire
               Record Office)
OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition surveyed 1871-2 2nd edition surveyed 1898 OS 25" to 1
               mile: 2nd edition surveyed 1894
Archival items Photographs, 1939 (in guidebook)
Further research on Warbrook House has been undertaken by the Hampshire Gardens Trust
               and is deposited with the Hampshire Historic Environment Record, site ref. 1834 (January
               2013)
This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 09/01/2013
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.