- Londesborough Hall
Londesborough Hall was a country house in the village of
Londesborough in theEast Riding of Yorkshire , close to the towns ofMarket Weighton andPocklington .The original house was built by the
Earl of Cumberland in 1589. In 1643 the property passed to the Boyle family, Earls of Cork and from 1664 also Earls of Burlington.Robert Hooke was engaged to enlarge the house and lay out formal gardens between 1679 and 1683. The 3rd Earl of Burlington, who was the principal patron of thePalladian movement in England and himself a noted architect, had alterations made to Londesborough byWilliam Kent in the 1720s.In 1753 Londesborough passed to the
Dukes of Devonshire along with all of Lord Burlington's other properties, as the 4th Duke had married his daughter and heiress. In 1819 the 6th Duke of Devonshire, who had a superfluity of grand homes, a large running debt inherited from his father, and many other expensive interests to pay for, including his reconstruction ofChatsworth House , had Londesbrough demolished. He is said to have regretted this, and in 1839 he had a hunting box built on the estate, but in 1845, under mounting financial strain, he sold the whole Londesborough estate to the "Railway King"George Hudson . Hudson's questionable financial practices soon brought about his ruin, and in 1849 he sold Londesborough to the banker Alfred Denison, who was createdBaron Londesborough in 1850. Londesborough enlarged the hunting box to create a country house in the Elizabethan style. His son later became theEarl of Londesborough .The Victorian house has also now been demolished, but the
Yorkshire Wolds Way long distance footpath passes through Londesborough Park, which still has open pastureland which the walk's official site describes as "a delight to walk through."External links
*oscoor gbx|SE875455
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.