Shardeloes

Shardeloes

Shardeloes is a large 18th century country house located one mile northwest of Amersham in Buckinghamshire, England. gbmapping|SU937978.

The house was originally built between 1758 and 1766 for William Drake, the Member of Parliament for Amersham. The original architect was Stiff Leadbetter, but the design was altered and completed by the better known architect Robert Adam. Built in the Palladian style, of stuccoed brick, the mansion is nine bays long by seven bays deep. It was constructed with the piano nobile on the ground floor and a mezzanine above. The north facade has a large portico of Corinthian columns. The terminating windows of the piano nobile are pedimented and recessed into shallow niches, as are the end bays of the east front. The roof, typically for the palladian style, is hidden by a balustrade. The original plans of the house by Leadbetter show a design closer in appearance to Holkham Hall, with square end towers. Adam cancelled this idea, but embellished the front with the portico.

The interior of the house has fine ornamental plaster work by Joseph Rose. [Detailed existing bills from Joseph Rose, 1761-63, totalling £1139 18s 0d, are noted by Geoffrey Beard, "Decorative Plasterwork in Great Britain" 1975:244] The entrance hall by Adam has fluted Doric pilasters and massive doorcases in the north and south walls. The dining room has stucco panels and an oval panel in the ceiling. The library was designed by James Wyatt in a classical style and has painted panels by Biagio Rebecca. Nikolaus Pevsner describes the staircase as "surprisingly small." [Pevsner, "Buckinghamshire". Penguin Books, 1960.] Pevsner for once rather misses the point: as the house was designed, all rooms of importance, including the bedrooms, were on the principal ground floor; thus, there was no need for a grand staircase, as no grandee would ever need to ascend to the secondary floor above. Blenheim Palace is another house with a small staircase for the same reason.

The house is flanked to the west by a service block and stable yard of the same period as the mansion, complete with clock tower. The stable yard is entered through five archways; the rectangular building has projecting wings and a pitched roof.

Humphry Repton was commissioned to lay out the grounds in the classical English landscape fashion, in the lee of the hill upon which the mansion stands. Repton dammed the River Misbourne to form a lake.

The mansion remained the ancestral home of the Tyrwhitt-Drake family until World War II when the house was requisitioned as a maternity hospital, for evacuated pregnant women from London to give birth, some three thousand of them. Following the war the house seemed destined to become one of the thousands of country houses being demolished, until a local conservation society The Amersham Society assisted by the Council for the Protection of Rural England fought a prolonged battle to save the house: eventually a preservation order was put on the building preventing its demolition. Shardeloes today is a complex of private apartments and flats; the principal reception rooms are preserved as common rooms for the residents.

External links

* [http://www.amersham.org.uk/shardeloes.htm Further information about Shardeloes]

Notes


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