- Hartwell House
Hartwell House is a
country house in the village ofHartwell in the county ofBuckinghamshire in southernEngland .The house was first mentioned in the Domesday book and belonged to an
illegitimate son ofWilliam the Conqueror . However, the core of the present house was constructed in the early17th century for the Hampden family and then the Lee family. The Lees, an old Buckinghamshire family, acquired Hartwell circa1650 by marriage into the Hampdens. The Confederate GeneralRobert E. Lee was one of their descendants. The Jacobean north front of the house, is constructed ofashlar and has a projecting porch with a bow window above; terminating each end of this facade are two flankingcanted bay s each with a double heightoriel window. Immediately each side of the porch two large windows indicate the hall within. Hiding the roofscape is aparapet with vases erected in1740 . Between1759 and1761 the architectHenry Keene substantially enlarged and "Georgianised" the house, and built the east front with its canted bay windows and a central porch in the Tuscan style.crowning the roof.
Between
1809 and1814 the owner of the houseSir Charles Lee let the mansion to exiled KingLouis XVIII of France . The arrival of the impoverished king and his court at Hartwell was not a happy experience for the mansion, with once grand and imperious courtiers farming chickens and assorted small livestock on the lead roofs. The King signed the document accepting (once again) the French crown in thelibrary of the house.In
1827 , Dr John Lee inherited the house from the unmarriedReverend Sir George Lee and during his ownership, the British Meteorological Society (nowRoyal Meteorological Society ) was founded in the library at Hartwell House in1850 .The
Reverend Nicholas Lee inherited Hartwell House when his brother, Dr John Lee died onFebruary 25 1866 at Hartwell.The 90
acre s (364,000 m²) gardens at Hartwell were laid out byCapability Brown circa1750 . The North Avenue is a grand vista through trees planted in1830 , sadly today terminated by the ever encroachingAylesbury . The gardens are reminiscent of nearby Stowe, withstatue s, anobelisk and ornamental bridge.The house remained a private residence until
1938 , when at risk of demolition the estate was acquired by the philanthropist Ernest Cook and the contents sold off by public auction. The Ernest Cook Trust still own the house today, and currently let it to a company who run the house as one of Buckinghamshire's most prestigioushotel s andrestaurant s. In recent years, due to its proximity toChequers it has frequently been the host of international and Government summits and meetings. Hartwell House is a Grade I listed building.The Hartwell Estate currently covers convert|1800|acre|km2 of farmland surrounding Hartwell House.
Hartwell's Egyptian Spring is a folly built in
1850 byJoseph Bonomi the Younger , an Egyptologist. It is an alcove seat on the western side of Lower Hartwell opposite a small spring. The stone pylon bears the Greek inscription ΑΡΙΣΤοΝ ΜΕΝ ΥΔΩΡ, translated as "Water is Best" [cite web | title=Hellenic Link Newsletter| url=http://www.helleniclinkmidwest.org/newsletters/HLMWnumber30.pdf] attributed toThales .In September 2008 the lease on the house was gifted to the
National Trust which declared the land and property inalienable, meaning the property can never be sold or developed.References
External links
* [http://www.hartwell-house.com/ Hartwell House]
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