Ferne House is a country house in the parish of Donhead St Andrew in Wiltshire, England, owned by Viscount Rothermere.[1]
There has been a settlement on the site since 1225 AD. The current house, known as Ferne Park and the third to occupy the site, was designed by the 2005 Driehaus Prize winner Quinlan Terry in 2001. The estate grounds straddle Donhead St Andrew and Berwick St John parishes.[2]
Mesolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age artefacts were found in the vicinity of the house during 1988 archaeological fieldwork.[3]
First house
editThe first Ferne House was the manor house of the de Ferne family: Philip de Ferne is recorded to have lived there in 1225.[4] From the Ferne family, in 1450 it passed to the Brockway family, and in 1561 to William Grove of Shaftesbury. By 1809 the house had become so dilapidated that it was demolished.[2][5]
The 18th-century gatepiers to the park remain; they are Grade II listed structures.[2][6]
Second house
editThe second Ferne House was built by Thomas Grove, "on an enlarged scale in the year 1811 on the site of the old structure … in an elevated situation, commanding a pleasing view of the surrounding country". The house is mentioned in surviving diaries of his daughters Charlotte and Harriet; an 1850 photograph of it is reproduced in The Grove Diaries.[2]
This house was remodelled some time after 1850 and assumed a square ground-plan.[7][8] In 1902 the house passed out of the ownership of the Grove family when it was sold to A. H. Charlesworth, who further enlarged it the following year.
The house was bought in 1914 by Alfred Douglas-Hamilton, 13th Duke of Hamilton, who also bought the nearby Ashcombe House around the same time. During World War II the house was used as an animal sanctuary by his wife Nina, co-founder in 1906 of the Animal Defence and Anti-Vivisection Society with Lizzy Lind af Hageby.[9] She used the sanctuary to enable well-off London families to evacuate their pets to safety. The house remained in the Hamilton family's possession until the estate was bequeathed by the Duchess to the Animal Defence and Anti-Vivisection Society, for the purpose of maintaining the sanctuary.[10] Nikolaus Pevsner briefly described the house in his 1963 edition of Wiltshire in The Buildings of England series (incorrectly listed in the parish of Berwick St John).[11]
A clause in the Duchess's will stated that it should remain as an animal sanctuary in perpetuity, but the restrictions she laid down were so stringent, according to The Observer, that the house was unsaleable, and as a result it was demolished in 1965. The animal sanctuary moved to Chard, Somerset, where it still operates; in 1985 the Animal Defence Trust still owned the property, including the still-standing stable block and lodges.[10]
In 1991, the Ferne Estate was sold at auction for £1,040,000. The buyer was Francis Dineley, whose father had made money from arms manufacturing.[10]
Third house
editSometime after 1991 the estate – described as "run down" – was bought by the 4th Viscount Rothermere and his wife.[10]
In 2001 the third and present Ferne House (known as Ferne Park) was built to the design of the architect Quinlan Terry, in Palladian style and at a reported cost of £40m.[12] The north front is a simplified copy of Came House, Dorset.[13] The house won the award for Best Modern Classical House from the Georgian Group in 2003, and in 2013 two cuboid wings were added, providing a dining room and library.[13]
A summerhouse in the grounds, called the New Pavilion and also designed by Terry, won the 2008 Georgian Group award for a New Building in the Classical Tradition.[14]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Shrubsole, Guy (4 January 2020). "The ten landowners who own one-sixth of Dorset". Who Owns England?.
- ^ a b c d "Question: Ferne House". Wiltshire Community History. Wiltshire Council. July 2011. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
- ^ "Wiltshire and Swindon Sites and Monument Record - Ferne House". Wiltshire Council. Archived from the original on 3 October 2011.
- ^ "Wiltshire and Swindon Sites and Monument Information: Ferne House". Wiltshire County Council. Archived from the original on 3 October 2011. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
- ^ "Donhead St. Andrew". Wiltshire Community History. Wiltshire Council. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
- ^ Historic England. "Gate piers to Ferne Park (1146095)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
- ^ Hawkins, Desmond (2008). The Grove Diaries. University of Delaware Press. pp. 230, 240–1. ISBN 9780874136005. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
- ^ Freeman, Jane; Stevenson, Janet H. (1987). "Parishes: Donhead St Andrew". In Crowley, D. A. (ed.). A History of the County of Wiltshire, Volume 13. Victoria County History. University of London. pp. 126–138. Retrieved 15 November 2021 – via British History Online.
- ^ Kean, Hilda. "The 'Smooth Cool Men of Science': The Feminist and Socialist Response to Vivisection", History Workshop Journal, 1995, 40: 16–38.
- ^ a b c d McSmith, Andy (13 June 1999). "Press dynasty is coming home from exile to a '£6m' mansion". The Observer.
- ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus; Cherry, Bridget (revision) (1975) [1963]. Wiltshire. The Buildings of England (2nd ed.). Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. p. 109. ISBN 0-14-0710-26-4.
- ^ "Lord's 40m home nears completion". Dorset Echo. 24 September 2003. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
- ^ a b Orbach, Julian; Pevsner, Nikolaus; Cherry, Bridget (2021). Wiltshire. The Buildings Of England. New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-300-25120-3. OCLC 1201298091.
- ^ "Architectural Awards/2008 awards: New Building in the Classical Tradition". Georgian Group. Archived from the original on 25 September 2010. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
Further reading
edit- Hawkins, Desmond, 1995, The Grove Diaries: The Rise and Fall of an English Family, 1809-1925 University of Delaware Press
- Hoare, Sir Richard Colt, 1829, The Modern History of South Wiltshire Volume 4, part 1: the Hundred of Dunworth, by James Everard, Baron Arundell and Sir R.C. Hoare. London: J.B. Nichols and Son, 55–56.
- Watkin, David, 2006, Radical Classicism: The Architecture of Quinlan Terry Rizzoli, p 206–217, ISBN 978-0-8478-2806-7.
External links
edit- Image of second house on the Lost Heritage website, archived in 2008
- Images of the third house – Quinlan Terry Architects