Two double-page and two single page engravings of Historic Country Estates in England being as follows;

"Knowsley" - Illustrated London News, August 9,1890 - see below

"Penshurst Place" - Illustrated London News, January 7,1888 - see below

Good condition with central folds as originally published. Minor spotting to the borders and fold of "Penshurst"- see scan. Blank or related text to the reverse. Dated in top borders. Double-page size 23 x 16 inches.

These are original antique prints and not reproductions . Great collectors items for the historian - see more of these in Seller's Other Items which can be combined for mailing at no additional cost.

Knowsley Hall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Knowsley Hall
Wide image of Knowsley Hall.jpg
Knowsley Hall
LocationNear LiverpoolMerseyside, England
Coordinates53.4380°N 2.8384°WCoordinates53.4380°N 2.8384°W
OS grid referenceSJ 444 938
Built forEarls of Derby
ArchitectJohn FosterWilliam Burn,
W. H. Romaine-Walker,
Claud Phillimore
Listed Building – Grade II*
Designated9 June 1952
Reference no.1253241
Knowsley Hall is located in Merseyside
Knowsley Hall
Location in Merseyside

Knowsley Hall is a stately home near Liverpool in the Metropolitan Borough of KnowsleyMerseyside, England. Since 1953 it has been designated a Grade II* listed building,[1] and is the ancestral home of the Stanley family, the Earls of Derby.[2] The hall is surrounded by 2,500 acres (10 km2) of parkland,[2] which contains the Knowsley Safari Park.[3] The hall is still owned by the Stanley family but is no longer a family home[4] and instead used for functions such as corporate events, conferences and weddings.[5]

History[edit]

Originally Knowsley was a medieval hunting lodge in the estate of Lathom House. It was inherited by the 10th Earl in 1702 who developed the lodge into a large house. A dairy (since demolished) was designed by Robert Adam, 1776-77.[6] The house was given Gothic castellations and extended further about 1820[7] to designs by John FosterWilliam Burn (who provided a boathouse and bridges in the park)[8] and other architects. In the early 20th century it was "tidied up" by W. H. Romaine-Walker for the 17th Earl. After the Second World War, the buildings were considerably reduced by Claud Phillimore, and ceased to be lived in by the family.[9] A smaller - but still substantial - family residence was built in the park.[4]

Earls of Derby[edit]

Main article: Earl of Derby

Thomas Stanley was rewarded with the title of Earl Derby in 1485 by Henry VII as a reward for his support at the Battle of Bosworth Field which led to Henry's gaining the crown. The title was taken from the area in South Lancashire called West Derby (and not from the city of Derby). In 1495 Thomas entertained Henry VII at Lathom House and at Knowsley, which was then still a hunting lodge.[10] Thomas, the second Earl, fought with Henry VIII at the Battle of the Spurs in 1513.[11] Ferdinando, the fifth Earl, was a poet and a patron of writers, including William Shakespeare. He held the position of Earl for only one year before dying from arsenic poisoning.[12] James, seventh Earl, was involved in the Civil War as a Royalist supporter of Charles ICharlotte, his wife, withstood a siege at Lathom Hall for ten weeks in 1644. James fought with Charles I at the Battle of Worcester, was taken prisoner and beheaded at Bolton. He became known as the "Martyr Earl".[13] The massive rebuilding of Knowsley in the early 18th century was carried out by James, the tenth Earl who had become wealthy through his marriage.[14]Edward, the twelfth Earl had a great interest in horseracing and founded the Derby and the Oaks horseraces. He created the State Dining Room for the visit of George IV in 1820–21. In the grounds of Knowsley he maintained a menagerie which contained 94 different species of mammals and 318 species of birds, many of which were rare and valuable.[15] Edward, the 13th Earl created a large library of works relating to natural history and was a champion of Edward Lear, whom he commissioned to paint animals from the menagerie.[16]

Edward, the 14th Earl was a politician who became Prime Minister three times. He was responsible for steering the Slavery Abolition Act through Parliament and in his third administration the Second Reform Bill was passed.[17] The political tradition was maintained by Frederick, the 16th Earl who became President of the Board of Trade and later was appointed Governor General of Canada. While in Canada he presented the Stanley Cup, the country's premier trophy for ice hockey.[17] Also a politician, Edward George Villiers, the 17th Earl, was Secretary of State for War for two periods, first during the First World War and again from 1922 to 1924. Between these periods he was Ambassador to France. He was also interested in horseracing, winning the Derby three times and owning the successful stallionHyperion. He was responsible for the major alterations to the house by Romaine-Walker.[18] Edward John, the 18th Earl was awarded the Military Cross in the Second World War, and after the war he reduced the hall to a more manageable size. He founded Knowsley Safari Park in 1971.[19] Restoration of the hall has been continued by Edward Richard William, the 19th and current Earl and his wife, Caroline Emma Neville, daughter of Lord Braybrooke.[19] The family do not live in the hall but in the New House in the grounds near the hall.[4]

Architecture[edit]

The southern facade of Knowsley Hall circa 1880 showing the Gothicisedsouth wing to the left and the loggia at the end of the east wing on the right

External[edit]

The house consists of a long wing running north-south dating originally from the 1720s to 1737 (the east wing) and at right angles to the west is the south wing, dating originally from around 1495. At the west end of this wing is a detached structure, the Dynamo Tower.[9] The east wing is Georgian in style, built in red brick with stone dressings. The south wing and Dynamo Tower are built in ashlar red sandstone.[1] The oldest part of the south wing is known as the Royal Lodging. On its north side, facing the courtyard, are two round turrets with conical roofs. This face has nine bays with tall sash windowswhich are divided into groups of three by the towers.[9]

The west side of the east wing, which faces the courtyard, has a total of 19 bays, with seven bays in a central section and six bays on each side. It consists of two storeys over a basement with an attic storey over the middle section. Above the central section is a pediment on the summit of which is sculpture of the eagle and child (the Stanley emblem). The east face of the east wing is particularly long. At the north end are four bays in two storeys; the centre is of nine bays in 2½ storeys; and at the south end are 16 bays, also in 2½ storeys but one storey lower because the land falls away to the south. At the south end of the east wing is a "handsome" two-storey, five-bay stone "portico or loggia" with paired Doric columns on the lower storey and paired fluted Ionic columns above. The east wing then jumps back with six bays facing west until it joins the south wing.[20]

Internal[edit]

This section describes mainly the rooms which are normally open to the public. The Entrance Hall is panelled in carved oak and is hung with early 18th-century paintings of the house and the park.[21] The Grand Staircase has a collection of oil paintings on leather.[12] The morning room is a light family room overlooking the gardens and parkland. The Breakfast Room has pale blue panels with paintings, one of which is a portrait of Charlotte, wife of the 7th Earl.[22] The Walnut Drawing-Room contains a number of portraits, including one of the second wife of the 12th Earl, the actress Elizabeth Farren.[14] The library contains a collection of books on natural history brought together by the 13th Earl.[17] The Stucco Room, decorated in Rococo style, was created in the 18th century to link the Royal Lodging with the rest of the house is now a ballroom with a sprung floor.[18] The State Dining Room is hung with portraits of family members.[23] The room was designed by Foster to look like a great hall with doors 30 feet (9 m) high and contains two Gothic fireplaces and an ormolu chandelier. It was reworked in 1890, adding a bay window, a carved dado and a roof consisting of a large rectangular lantern supported on brackets which is glazed round its sides.[24] The hall now measures 53 by 37 feet (16 by 11 m) and is 50 feet (15 m) high.[15]

Parkland[edit]

This consists of an area of approximately 2,500 acres (10 km2) surrounded by a stone wall 9 12 miles (15 km) long.[21] It has been registered by English Heritage at Grade II.[25] The park was landscaped in the 1770s by "Capability" Brown, who flooded a 62 acres (25 ha) lake to feed the water-gardens around the hall.[21] The southeast section of the park was made into a safari park in 1971. To the east and northeast of the hall is a chain of lakes, White Man's Dam, the Octagon Pond and the Home Pond.[26] The Octagon was built as a summer house in 1755[4] and designed by Robert Adam.[21]

The park contains a number of buildings. These include the New House which was built for the 18th Earl and his family, by Phillimore in 1963 in Neo-Georgian style, the stables to the north of the hall which were designed by William Burn in the 1840s, the boathouse of 1837, also by William Burn, the Nest, Home Farm, and a number of lodges.[27]

The parkland also contains the highest point in Knowsley Unitary Authority, 100 metres above sea level, at SJ 456 943.[28]


Penshurst Place

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Penshurst Place Italian Garden in Spring (c) Penshurst Place
The Great Hall at Penshurst Place, circa 1915

Penshurst Place is a historic building near TonbridgeKent, 32 miles (51 km) south east of LondonEngland. It is the ancestral home of the Sidney family, and was the birthplace of the great Elizabethan poet, courtier and soldier, Sir Philip Sidney. The original medieval house is one of the most complete surviving examples of 14th-century domestic architecture in England. Part of the house and its gardens are open for public viewing.

Contents

History[edit]

Private entrance to Penshurst Place, Penshurst, Kent.

The ancient village of Penshurst was situated within the manor of that name: the manor appears as Penecestre or Penchester, a name adopted by Stephen de PenecestreLord Warden of the Cinque Ports, who possessed the manor towards the end of the 13th century.

The present manor house was built in 1341 for Sir John de Pulteney, a London merchant and four-times Lord Mayor of London[1] who wanted a country residence within easy riding distance of London. This was at the time when such properties ceased to be castles: they were more dwellings that could be defended in an emergency. When Henry IV's third son, John, Duke of Bedford, occupied Penshurst, the second hall, known as the Buckingham Building, was built: so called after the subsequent owners, the Dukes of Buckingham. Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham was executed in 1521 by King Henry VIII following a lavish feast held at Penshurst Place hosted by the Duke in honour of Henry. It then stayed in the crown estate for the rest of his reign; with documented evidence Henry used Penshurst Place as a hunting lodge; visiting with his courtier Brandon. The property being only a few miles from Hever Castle; childhood home of Henry's second wife Anne Boleyn. See Michael Brennan's books for further details.

In 1550, Henry VIII's son, King Edward VI, granted the house and estate to Sir Ralph Fane, a supporter of Protector Somerset, but it was forfeited two years later after Sir Ralph was executed for treason.

Sidney family[edit]

Penshurst Place was enlarged after 1552 when King Edward VI granted the house to Sir William Sidney (1482–1554), who had been a courtier to the King’s father, Henry VIII. Sir William's son Henry (1529–1586) married Lady Mary Dudley, whose family became implicated in the Lady Jane Grey affair, although Henry himself escaped any such implications. During his lifetime he added apartments and the "King’s Tower" to Penshurst. He also created what is now one of England's oldest private gardens, with records going back to 1346.

Philip Sidney (1554–1586), Henry’s son, was born at Penshurst Place in 1554. Poet and courtier, he was buried in old St Paul's, in London, having died 25 days after a fatal wounding from a bullet in the thigh at the battle of Zutphen, but his tomb was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666.

Philip's brother, Robert Sidney, inherited Penshurst. His time there resulted in more additions to the state rooms, including an impressive "Long Gallery". He had also inherited the Earldom of Leicester, and his descendants for the next seven generations continued to live at the mansion.

By the 19th century, the building was falling into disrepair, but a new occupant in 1818, Sir John Shelley-Sidney, and his son Philip began to restore it. The latter was created 1st Baron De L'Isle and Dudley in 1835. The 6th Baron, William Sidney (1909–1991), was one of only two men who held both the Victoria Cross and membership of the Order of the Garter; he was created 1st Viscount De L'Isle in 1956. To him and to his son, the 2nd Viscount, much of the modern restoration of Penshurst is due, in spite of the house having suffered neglect during World War I. Today, the house and gardens are open to the public.

Many members of the family are buried or commemorated in the Sidney Chapel at St John the Baptist, Penshurst.

Main features of the house[edit]

Flag Garden at Penshurst Place

It is possible to see in the house the evidence of occupation over its 670-year history:

  • The State Rooms, filled with a collection acquired by generations of the Sidney family.
  • The West Solar, or State Dining Room, part of the medieval building, contains a collection of family portraits, furniture and porcelain.
  • The Queen Elizabeth Room, named after Queen Elizabeth I, with its display of early upholstered furniture.
  • The Tapestry Room
  • The Long Gallery, full of royal and family portraits
  • The Nether Gallery: with an array of arms and armour
  • Toy Museum - features toys from several generations of the Sidney family, includes dolls, doll houses, teddies, toy soldiers, mechanical toys and general play items
  • Queen Victoria's stool: in one of the smallest rooms of the house, there is a green stool on display. Queen Victoria sat on this stool when she was pronounced Empress of India in 1876.