| Identification and description | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | FORCETT HALL | ||||||
| Location | 
                     
  | 
               ||||||
| Localisation | Latitude: 54.502520 Longitude: -1.7367001 National Grid Reference: NZ 17149 11943  | 
               ||||||
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| Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden  Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001063 Date first listed: 10-May-1984  | 
               
Gardens and park of c 1740 possibly by Thomas Wright incorporating part of an Iron
               Age oppidum.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Forcett lies on the north-west edge of a large Iron Age oppidum, one of the largest
               and most impressive monuments of its type in northern England. The Shuttleworth family
               owned Forcett from the 1590s and it was Richard Shuttleworth who rebuilt the Hall
               and laid out the park in the 1740s. The estate was sold in 1785 but it remained intact
               and is in private ownership (1998).
DESCRIPTION LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Forcett Hall lies immediately
               west and south-west of the village of Forcett in an area which is rural and agricultural.
               The c 90ha site is on land which rises on each side of a lake which runs north-west/south-east
               across the centre of the site. The boundary is walled and formed by the B6274 on the
               east side and minor roads on the other sides.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The principal entrance is on the north-east side of the site
               where there is an imposing entrance screen and paired lodges (Daniel Garrett c 1740,
               listed grade II*). A central triumphal arch surmounted by urns is linked to the lodges
               by a low wall surmounted by railings from which a drive leads north-west and west
               to the Hall. An entrance on the north side of the site has early C18 gate piers (listed
               grade II) probably also designed by Garrett from which a drive runs south-east towards
               the Hall.
PRINCIPAL BUILDING Forcett Hall (listed grade I) is shown in a drawing by Samuel Buck
               of c 1720 as a Jacobean house with narrow south wings. In c 1740 Daniel Garrett substantially
               remodelled the building. The entrance front is pedimented and has rusticated giant
               pilasters while the garden front is articulated by giant Ionic pilasters and has a
               central entrance with a double staircase leading down from it. Immediately to the
               east of the Hall and linked to it by quadrant walls flanking C18 gate piers, an C18
               stable block (listed grade II*) is ranged around a courtyard.
St Cuthbert's church (listed grade II*) lies c 400m south-east of the Hall, outside
               the area here registered, within a churchyard. It has Norman or earlier origins and
               was partially rebuilt in 1859.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS A terrace runs along the garden front and central stone
               steps lead down to a path which runs south between lawns and encircles a fountain,
               much as shown on the 1857 OS map. There are views south from the terrace and lawns
               over the park and lake with rising land beyond. A path leads south-west through woodland,
               which is separated from the park by a ha-ha, to a mound called The Mount which stands
               at the north-west end of the lake and was probably formed from spoil created by its
               construction. On the south-east side of The Mount, c 350m south-west of the Hall,
               there is a grotto (C18, listed grade II*) with an arched opening flanked by two smaller
               openings in the rustic stonework. The interior of the grotto has barrel-vaulted chambers
               and a passage leads from the rear of the central bay to a brick-lined icehouse. The
               grotto is similar to a design by Thomas Wright (1711-86) published in 1758. The path
               continues through woodland and joins with a path which runs east across the park to
               the south side of the lake. A painting of c 1770 (Harris 1979) shows the grotto and
               The Mount with a circular domed building crowning it, with the lake in the foreground
               and park and Hall in the background.
On the east side of the Hall a ha-ha divides the wooded pleasure grounds from the
               park and a path leading south from the main entrance drive is a former carriage drive
               called Church Walk. Some 400m south-east of the Hall the walk joins with an earthen
               bank which is part of an Iron Age oppidum called Stanwick (scheduled ancient monument)
               which runs along the eastern boundary of the park from this point. The bank gives
               good views in every direction but to the south. The drive leads to a boathouse on
               the eastern tip of the lake, c 550m south-east of the Hall and the bank has been modified
               to form the lake's dam. The drive continues to the top of the hill on the south side
               of the lake and turns briefly to the west at a point where long-distance views can
               be obtained. To the south the rampart continues with a footpath running along the
               top of it and c 400m to the south of the dam there is a hollow on a site marked 'grotto'
               on the 1857 OS map. Some 90m south of this the bank has been modified to create a
               platform supported by a semicircular wall, possibly the site of a seat.
PARK The park is sheltered on every side by tree belts and consists largely of open
               grassland divided by the lake which is more than 600m in length. The area north of
               the lake is called Front Park and that to the south High Park. In the southern tip
               of the park woodland is called Scot Buts. The tree cover and layout is much as shown
               on the 1857 OS map.
It is not known who was responsible for the design of the park but several sources
               (for example Leach, CL 1974) suggest Thomas Wright as a candidate. Wright had worked
               alongside Garrett on commissions at Wallington (qv) in Northumbria and elsewhere.
               The incorporation of the prehistoric ramparts into the landscape could be seen as
               an expression of interest in them, perhaps for their historic or sublime qualities,
               and some archaeologists regard the oppidum as a designed landscape in its own right
               since it is thought to have symbolic or ritual, rather than defensive origins (see
               Bowden in Pattison 1998). Wright was interested in antiquities and published books
               on Roman and Saxon remains.
KITCHEN GARDEN The kitchen gardens (walls, gates and Garden House listed grade II)
               lie c 150m north-east of the Hall and consist of two walled enclosures, the eastern
               of which has the park perimeter wall as the east side and has within it a dovecote
               (listed grade II*) which is a hexagonal structure raised upon an arcaded base, perhaps
               to provide shelter for livestock. The western garden has a pavilion called the Garden
               House attached to the north wall which has large sash windows and an interior with
               decorative plasterwork. To the east of this, ranged along the north wall, there are
               a number of bothies and ancillary buildings.
REFERENCES Samuel Buck's Yorkshire Sketchbook (1720), Wakefield Historical Society
               facsimile reprint (1979), p 365 N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Yorkshire The
               North Riding (1966), pp 163-4 Country Life, 155 (12 September 1974), p 694-5; (17
               September 1974), p 194 J Harris, The Artist and the Country House (1979), p 297 J
               Hatcher, Richmondshire Architecture (1990), pp 89-93 P Pattison (ed), There by Design,
               Field Archaeology in Parks and Gardens (1998), pp 23-6
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1857 2nd edition published 1919 OS 25"
               to 1 mile: 2nd edition published 1914
Description written: November 1998 Register Inspector: CEH Edited: October 1999
               
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.