| Identification and description | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | INTWOOD HALL | ||||||
| Location | 
                     
  | 
               ||||||
| Localisation | Latitude: 52.589782 Longitude: 1.2379057 National Grid Reference: TG 19424 04033  | 
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| Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden  Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1000320 Date first listed: 18-Sep-1987  | 
               
A manor house with walled gardens of C16 origins set in a diminutive mid C18 park.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
The medieval manor house of Intwood was rebuilt by its new owner Sir Richard Gresham,
               some time before 1545. This house was, in turn, extensively rebuilt by his son, also
               Richard Gresham, around 1560. The house and associated gardens to the north and north-east
               are illustrated in a painting of c 1680 (Harris 1979). The property passed to William
               Gresham and subsequently to the Hobart family, in whose hands it remained until the
               end of the C18. The estate was then acquired by Joseph Salusbury Muskett, who in 1807
               commissioned Arthur Browne to rebuild the house, on a slightly different site, incorporating
               part of the C16 fabric. During the middle of the C19 a small park was laid out around
               it. The substantial neoclassical villa was altered in the late C19 by J B Pierce for
               Clement Unthank, who had married Muskett's daughter and heir. The house was extended,
               refaced in red brick and given 'Jacobethan' details. During the C20 the estate passed
               through marriage from the Unthank family to the Darling family. It remains (1999)
               in private ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Intwood Hall lies c 4km south-west of
               Norwich, immediately to the south of the southern bypass, to the east of the A11 junction.
               Although close to the city and the road, the Hall and park face south and east across
               a rural landscape of well-wooded farmland. The park of c 20ha, with gardens of c 2ha,
               is roughly rectangular in shape with thick plantations along the north and west boundaries.
               To the south-east a hedge screens the road from the Hall and the park beyond is bounded
               by plantation woodland. The ground is virtually flat with a slight fall to the south-east.
               The Hall is located in the centre of the northern boundary on the highest ground and
               enjoys views across the park to the countryside beyond.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The site is entered from the north-east corner past the c
               1844 'Gothic'-style single-storey flint and thatch Lodge Cottage (listed grade II).
               The drive, lined with oak backed by yew and rhododendron, runs west through woodland
               and divides c 100m north-east of the Hall. The northern fork leads round to the stable
               yard whilst the southern fork sweeps past a mid C19 gazebo built in Elizabethan style
               with C16 materials c 60m east of the Hall, to arrive at the north front through newly
               realigned (1990s) garden walls.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Intwood Hall is a C19 red-brick country house in the Jacobethan
               style. It is constructed in two storeys with a crenellated roof, mullioned windows
               and ornamental chimney stacks. The three-bay south front faces the park and has a
               central doorway, with a service wing to the east incorporating a late C20 orangery
               (added 1995). The four-bay north, entrance front faces the walled gardens, the main
               door projecting from the facade in a balustraded single-storey bay. A single-storey
               service wing projects to the west. The Hall incorporates fragments of the Tudor manor
               built by Richard Gresham in 1560 and more substantial remains of the neoclassical
               villa modelled by Arthur Browne for Joseph Muskett in 1807. The Jacobethan rebuilding
               in the late C19 was reduced to the east, west, and north in the mid C20 to create
               the house which survives today. 
The stable yard lies to the north-west of the Hall, approached through a Victorian
               arched water tower on the north side, into an enclosed service courtyard created in
               the mid C19 from a range of older farm buildings (listed grade II).
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The gardens surround the Hall at Intwood and comprise
               five walled garden compartments (some listed grade II) built of red brick with partly
               crenellated tops, constructed over four centuries from the mid C16 onwards. From the
               north front the Entrance Garden is gravelled by the Hall with an axial path running
               north dividing box-edged lawns with topiary. The west wall is early C17, whilst the
               north wall is mid C17 with C19 coping. Below the north wall are deep herbaceous borders
               and the central path is aligned on an arched gateway leading to a second walled enclosure
               with pergolas and open gazebo, designed in 1994 by George Carter and Allen Peterson
               as a formal Rose Garden. The walls surrounding this garden are mid C19. To the east
               of the Entrance Garden is a third walled enclosure known as the Water Garden, its
               west wall being C16, the north terrace walls dating from the early C17, and the east
               wall from the mid C17. The late C20 layout incorporates gravel paths and box-edged
               borders with a lawn and central circular pool. A raised terrace walk with herbaceous
               planting runs along the north wall and has a central cascade falling into a rill which
               feeds the pool. A gazebo, C19 on a C17 base, stands at the east end of the terrace
               walk, the west end of which leads to steps returning to the Entrance Garden.
On the west front of the Hall beside the Orangery a late C20 pool garden has been
               laid out with flagstone floor and statuary. This is bordered on the south side by
               a low brick wall (late C20) which runs west to connect up to the walled kitchen garden
               enclosures. The south front leads onto a small terrace with steps down to a lawn bordered
               to the south by a ha-ha overlooking the park. To the west of the lawn is an area of
               late C20 mixed shrub and herbaceous planting in informal borders with paths leading
               into Lilac Plantation, a Victorian woodland pleasure ground which retains some of
               its yew-edged walks.
The east front of the Hall faces a sweep of lawn bordered to the east by the ha-ha.
               Mature cedars flank the curving entrance drive.
PARK Intwood has a small, well-treed park laid mainly to pasture and scattered with
               trees of mixed ages and species. A high proportion of the mature mid C18 timber is
               oak with plane, horse chestnut, and ash. A knoll on slightly raised ground to the
               south beside the road is more densely planted to direct the eye to either side of
               the knoll. The road which cuts through the park is hidden behind a hedge and beyond
               it the ploughed section of the park is backed by enclosing plantations which terminate
               the view from the Hall.
KITCHEN GARDEN The walled kitchen garden lies to the west of the Hall and comprises
               high red-brick walls to the north and east, a high flint wall to the west, and a low
               flint wall to the south. It is divided by gravel paths and box-edged borders filled
               with fruit and vegetables. C19 glasshouses survive on the north wall, together with
               one early C20 glasshouse. Beyond this enclosure to the west is a further enclosed
               area of land laid to grass and bordered to the south by the remains of an orchard,
               currently being removed to create a small lake (1999).
REFERENCES
N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: North-west and South Norfolk (1962), p 216 J
               Harris, The Artist and the Country House (1979), p 138 J Kenworthy-Browne et al, Burke's
               and Savills Guide to Country Houses III, (1981), p 145 J Garden History 11, (1991),
               nos 1 and 2, pp 67-9 Tom Williamson, The archaeology of the landscape park, BAR Brit
               Ser 268 (1998), pp 253-4
Maps Untitled estate map of Intwood Hall, 1729 (private collection) Intwood Hall estate
               map, c 1790 (private collection) 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 1886 2nd edition published 1904 3rd edition
               published 1929 OS 25" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published 1913
Archival items The main collection of documents concerning Intwood are held in a private
               collection.
Description written: August 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.