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Ashton Court

Ashton Court is a mansion house and estate to the west of Bristol in England. Although the estate lies mainly in North Somerset, it is owned by the City of Bristol. The mansion and stables are a Grade I listed building.[1] Other structures on the estate are also listed.

Ashton Court
Location within Somerset

Location within Bristol
General information
Architectural styleMixed
Town or cityBristol
CountryEngland
Coordinates51°26′52″N 2°38′41″W / 51.4479°N 2.6446°W / 51.4479; -2.6446Coordinates: 51°26′52″N 2°38′41″W / 51.4479°N 2.6446°W / 51.4479; -2.6446
Construction started1633
ClientSmyth family

Ashton Court has been the site of a manor house since the 11th century, and has been developed by a series of owners since then. From the 16th to 20th centuries it was owned by the Smyth family with each generation changing the house. Designs by Humphry Repton were used for the landscaping in the early 19th century. It was used as a military hospital in the First World War. In 1936 it was used as the venue for the Royal Show and, during the Second World War as an army transit camp. In 1946 the last of the Smyth family died and the house fell into disrepair before its purchase in 1959 by Bristol City Council.

The estate developed from the original deer park and is Grade II* listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England. It is the venue for a variety of leisure activities, including the now-defunct Ashton Court Festival, Bristol International Kite Festival and the Bristol International Balloon Fiesta. It is home to charity The Forest of Avon Trust.

Early history

Ashton Court dates back to before the 11th century. It is believed that a fortified manor stood on the site, given to Geoffrey de Montbray, Bishop of Coutances, by William the Conqueror.[2] In the Domesday Book it is referred to as a wealthy estate owned by the Bishop of Coutances, with a manor house, a great hall, and courtyards entered through gatehouses.[3] The property passed through successive owners and at the end of the 14th century it was considerably expanded when Thomas De Lions, a nobleman originally from France, obtained a permit to enclose a park for his manor. The house was owned by the Choke family for some time. In 1506 it was sold to Sir Giles Daubeney, a knight and a Chamberlain of Henry VII. Henry VIII gave the estate to Sir Thomas Arundel in 1541 and four years later in 1545 Sir Thomas sold it to John Smyth. The Smyth family owned the property for the next 400 years.[4] Smyth also bought the land which had been owned, until the dissolution of the monasteries, by Bath Abbey.[5] He used the land to extend the deer park, bringing him into conflict with the residents of Whitchurch, who complained that he had used common land.[6]

Thomas and Florence Smyth

 
Thomas and Florence Smyth 1627

Thomas Smyth (1609–1642) was the first member of the family to make major alterations and additions to the original manor house. He was a Member of Parliament and a successful lawyer. In 1627, at the age of only seventeen he married Florence daughter of John Poulett, 1st Baronet Poulett of Hinton St George.[7]

In 1635 Thomas added a new southern front which was in the style of Inigo Jones. It was described by Collinson in 1791 in the following terms:[8]

The front is in length one hundred and forty three feet and consists below of three rooms; the western one of which is a fine apartment ninety-three feet long and twenty feet wide and contains several family and other portraits. The back part of the house is very ancient and the court leading to the park westward is called Castle Court from its having been embattled and still retaining an old gateway similar to those adopted in baronial mansions. The second court contains some of the offices and its entrance from without is under a low doorway between two lofty turrets one of which contains a bell and clock. The stables and corresponding offices in the front court are of ancient date. The whole contributes to a very venerable and picturesque building.

 
Ashton Court 1791

Further major additions were made to the building by Sir John Hugh Smyth (1734–1802). He inherited the estate in 1783 and added the new library to the north west of the house. Sir John also asked the famous landscape designer Humphry Repton for advice about the east front of the house. Repton drafted a plan but Sir John's death halted any further work on the house.[3] However Repton's landscape designs were implemented by Sir John's successor Sir Hugh Smyth. In his book Humphry Repton gave a detailed description of the old and newer parts of the house before the library additions and included a drawing of the eastern front of the house as he saw it in about 1790.[9]

Sir John Smyth

 
Sir John Smyth

As reported by Esme Smyth, Ashton Court's last resident, Sir John Smyth (1776–1849) was responsible for the remodelling of the house. In about 1940 she was interviewed by Raymond Gorges, who was researching a book, and she gave him an engraving of the house showing the additions that she said were made by Sir John.[10]

Sir John was a bachelor. He was said, by Lady Emily Smyth, to be devoted to horses and kept an extensive stud.[11] His importance as a major builder of Ashton Court is verified by John Evans who in 1828 wrote a book about Bristol and its surrounding area. He said:

This seat of Sir John Smyth is a stately edifice ... It has of late been much enlarged with stables nearly as extensive as the house and also a park enclosed by a wall which is twelve feet high in the lowest part. Two handsome lodges have also been added, one of them built from a gothic design.[12]

Sir Greville and Lady Emily Smyth

 
Sir Greville Smyth

Sir Greville Smyth inherited the property in 1852 and remained a bachelor until he was 48 years old. During that time he undertook extensive renovations. He also kept a very impressive garden which was described in detail in gardening magazines and newspapers.[13][14][15]

In 1872 he commissioned the well-known architect Benjamin Ferrey to make additions which were described as follows.

The Western Wing has been rearranged but the principal parts of the works have been concentrated in the central portion of the buildings. This part has been raised considerably and in a great measure rebuilt and is surmounted by two octagonal towers which rise to a height of 72 ft. There is a covered passage running the south side of the courtyard which opens out into the court by the arcading of five bays.[16]

 
Dame Emily Smyth

Even more extensive alterations were made between 1884 and 1885. Shortly before he married Emily, the widow of George Oldham Edwards, he employed the notable Bath architect Major Charles Edward Davis to transform the house. The work took 18 months to complete. A detailed description of the alterations was given in the Bristol Mercury.[17] in 1885. He converted the stables in the south east wing to living areas which included a huge museum for his natural history collection. He built a grand hall with richly carved oak panels. In the west wing he built a massive carved oak staircase with twist bannisters and introduced perpendicular windows. He also built a winter garden by enclosing the clock court. This is now the Winter Garden Bar. The following description of this elaborate room with a waterfall fountain is given in this newspaper article as follows:

This leads through two arched entrances to one of the most charming winter gardens of which any private mansion in the western counties can boast. It has been formed out of what was formerly the open clock tower court which has been supplied with a glazed iron roof. Round the tessellated flooring have been formed the gracefully curved flower borders edged with glazed tiling surmounted with rockery. This rock work covered with moss and filled in with water plants luxuriant grasses and ferns margins an ornamental sheet of water of serpentine form from the surface of which jets of water are thrown into a huge basin shell – one of the largest of the kind we have seen. It is ingeniously constructed to form a waterfall the streams descending to a second basin shell just above the sheet of water. Around this are some the choicest ferns and palms. From the roof hang clusters of incandescent laps, interspersed with baskets filled with gracefully drooping ferns and from the surface of the water lilies modestly rise.[17]

 
The Winter Garden.

Also in the 1880s 4 acres (1.6 ha) of formal gardens were laid out including a terrace garden, which is now a lawn, a wilderness garden with basin fountain and a rose garden.[18] Avenues of sequoias and cedars were planted along with other specimen trees.[19]

In 1891 Lady Emily Smyth held an interview where she outlined further details of these alterations made by Sir Greville. She also gave a few details of some interesting secret rooms and passages in the medieval part of the building on the western side which she referred to as "Drax's Kennel" and "The Fox's Hole".[20] Sir Greville Smyth died in 1901 and Lady Emily Smyth died in 1914.[21]

The next and last residents of the house were Gilbert and Esme Smyth. They lived there for the next thirty years. Gilbert died in 1940 and Esme in 1946 and the house was left to their daughter Esme Francis Cavendish. She and her husband tried to sell the house immediately in 1946 to help pay the death duties.[22] However the Cavendish family did not succeed until thirteen years later in 1959 during which time the house was unoccupied and started to decay. It was sold at this time to Bristol City Council who still owns it today.[23]

Archives

Archives of the Ashton Court estate (including estate management and estate office papers) and personal papers of the Smyth family are held by Bristol Archives (Ref. AC) (online catalogue). Bristol Archives also holds photos and papers about the redevelopment of Ashton Court mansion and stables (Ref. 43326) (online catalogue) and (Ref. 45390) (online catalogue). Other records relating to the Ashton Court estate are also held by Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre[24] and the University of Bristol Special Collections.[25]

Architecture

 
Ashton Court displays a profusion of architectural styles. Here various wings and juxtapositions display Strawberry Hill Gothic to the left, Italian Renaissance windows to the right, a Victorian Porte cochere in the centre, simple Tudor mullion and Gothic tracery windows, plus pseudo-medieval battlements and chaste English renaissance gables.

Due to successive remodellings and enlargements the architecture at Ashton Court is complex and seldom what it seems. The core of the house, a 15th-century manor, has been obliterated by later wings, which have in turn been remodelled and altered, most substantially around 1635.[26] Therefore, the plan of the house has evolved as irregular with many juxtapositions and little cohesion; while the majority of the house was built in the 17th century, a time of classical architecture, remodelling and alteration to the fenestration has created an overall Gothic appearance.[26]

In the early 19th century, the house was given a 300 feet (91 m) long facade in an attempt to provide some uniformity and some classical grandeur.[26] However even here, the architecture does not remain faithful to a single style. At the centre of this facade is a much altered Tudor gatehouse, probably built in the 16th century as a portal to the 14th-century manor house.[27] In order to create the long facade, the existing stables, to the right of the gatehouse, were converted to domestic use and given seven bays of Gothic mullioned windows.[27] To the left of the gatehouse, the flanking south-west wing is of a different style.[27]

This classically designed wing has been attributed to Inigo Jones, but without supporting evidence;[27] as with a similar attribution at Brympton d'Evercy, also in Somerset, it seems to be based solely on the alternating segmental and pointed pediments over the groundfloor windows, and ignoring the irregularities in their spacings and placings, which Jones is unlikely to have countenanced.[28]

To give the long facade with its two wings of contrasting architectural styles a uniting, common feature, the third story of oval windows of the left-hand wings, which was then topped with a Jacobean balustrade was repeated above the Gothic right-hand wing; however, inexplicably the attempt at classical unity was broken by the use of castellations instead of a balustrade on the right-hand side.[27] Overall, its length, contrasting styles, high gatehouse and lack of symmetry give the facade a collegiate rather than domestic appearance. The focal point of the facade, the gatehouse, has multi-faceted turrets at its corners, In 1885, the gatehouse was given a Gothic makeover, which included raising its height and adding the fan vaulting to the ceiling of the passage leading, not to a great base court, as such grandiose architectural feature would suggest, but to a small glazed inner courtyard (the Winter Garden).[27]

The north wing was included in the remodelling work of 1805 and given ogee headed windows in the delicate Strawberry Hill Gothic style, popular at turn of the 19th century; it was a forerunner of the more medieval ecclesiastical Gothic style that was to characterise the architecture of the 19th century, and employed at Ashton Court during the 1885 alterations.[27]

Recent history

 
The Clifton Lodge gate at the junction of the A369 and B3129

During the First World War the estate was used as a military hospital,[23] and in the Second World War was requisitioned by the War Office and used in turn as a transit camp, RAF HQ and US Army Command HQ.[29] The estate was the venue for the 1936 Royal Show.[30] One of the exhibition buildings, despite its temporary nature, was an innovative piece of modernist architecture still remembered as the Gane Pavilion. It was designed by Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer as a show house for the Bristol furniture manufacturer Crofton Gane.[31] For most of the 20th century Ashton Court was the venue for the North Somerset Show, however this is now held in Wraxall.[32]

In 1946, the last resident of Ashton Court Dame Esme Smyth, died. After the house became derelict, it was taken over by the City in 1959.[23] Restoration has been an ongoing process since then, but even after extensive investment by both the council and from Heritage Lottery Fund grants, presently only about a quarter of the building is occupied or usable. The available facilities of the house are rented out for business conferences, parties and weddings. In 2013 a fire damaged the northern wing. It was contained by Avon Fire and Rescue Service, otherwise the rest of the building would have been at risk.[33]

Between 1974 and 2007 the Ashton Court Festival was held in the grounds of the estate. The festival was a weekend event which featured a variety of local bands and national headliners. Mainly aimed at local residents, the festival did not have overnight camping facilities and was financed by donations and benefit gigs.

Starting as a small one-day festival in 1974, the festival grew during succeeding years and was said to be Britain's largest free festival until changes brought on by government legislation resulted in compulsory fees and security fencing being introduced. After problems were caused by a temporary move to Hengrove Park in 2001, due to the foot and mouth crisis, and a washout in 2007, the organisers declared bankruptcy in 2007.

The mansion house and stables have been designated by Historic England as a Grade I listed building.[34] The house is listed on the Heritage at Risk Register and described as being in "slow decay".[35] The lower lodge to Ashton Court and attached gates, railings and bollards, which were built in 1805 by Henry Wood, are Grade II* listed buildings.[36] The lower lodge was fully refurbished in 2016 with funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund and is now named Ashton Gatehouse. The building is now a heritage site managed by Ashton Park School.[37] The garden and perimeter walls and railings are also listed.[38][39][40]

Since 2018, the mansion house has been managed by Bristol charity Artspace Lifespace, allowing the building to be open to the public for a variety of events.

 
Ashton Court at dusk during a corporate event

Location and surroundings

 
Aerial view of Ashton Court Estate

The house stands within a large estate spanning the boundary between Bristol and North Somerset, approximately 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from the city centre. It is on the western side of the River Avon close to the Clifton Suspension Bridge and the suburb of Leigh Woods and the Leigh Woods National Nature Reserve which are east of Ashton Court. To the north and west is open countryside. The estate was previously much larger than it is today and included areas which are now suburbs of Bristol including Ashton Gate, Ashton Vale and Southville where the Greville Smyth Park is located. The land for the park was donated by the Smyth family and then landscaped by the city council.[41][42]

The estate covers 850 acres (340 ha) of woods and open grassland laid out by Humphry Repton.[43] It includes two pitch-and-putt golf courses, a disc golf course, an orienteering course and horse riding and mountain bike trails.[44] Bristol's weekly parkrun event (a free, timed 5 km run organised by volunteers) is held at Ashton Court.[45]

There is a deer park which was started in the 14th century and extended in the 16th and 17th centuries. There are still two areas of the estate with deer enclosures. The park contains a great variety of wildlife; much of the site (an area of 210.31 hectares) was notified in 1998 as a Site of Special Scientific Interest due to the presence of rare woodland beetles including: Ctesias serra, Phloiotrya vaudoueri and Eledona agricola.[46]

The 2.37 hectares of Ashton Court Meadow is managed as a nature reserve by the Avon Wildlife Trust. It contains a wide range of flowering plants, including wild carrot, yellow-wort and field scabious. Some unusual parasitic plants are also found here, such as common broomrape which feeds off clovers, and yellow rattle, which feeds partly off grass.[47]

Clarken Combe, at the western edge of the estate, is a woodland area with a range of plant species, including narrow-lipped helleborine, which grows here in small numbers under beech.[48]

In 2002 a 700-year-old oak tree, called the Domesday Oak, was selected by The Tree Council as one of 50 Great British Trees. In 2011 a crack appeared in the trunk and oak support beams were fitted to support the tree. The supports were only partly successful and a section of the tree collapsed; the remaining part of the tree was pruned to reduce the weight of the surviving section.[49][50]

See also

References

  1. ^ Historic England. "Ashton Court Mansion and Stables (Grade I) (1129841)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  2. ^ Collinson 1791, pp. 289–292.
  3. ^ a b Pleydell Smithyman Ltd. (PDF). Bristol City Council. p. 26. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  4. ^ Collinson 1791, p. 292.
  5. ^ Bond 1998, p. 45.
  6. ^ Bond 1998, p. 58.
  7. ^ Yerby, George; Hunneyball, Paul. "Smyth, Thomas (c.1609–1642), of Ashton Court, Long Ashton, Som". History of Parliament. The History of Parliament Trust. from the original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  8. ^ Collinson 1791, p. 294.
  9. ^ Loudon, J.C. (1840). The landscape gardening and landscape architecture of the late Humphrey Repton, esq., being his entire works on these subjects. Loudon. p. 296. from the original on 2 April 2016.
  10. ^ Gorges 1944, p. 113.
  11. ^ "Lady Smyth at Ashton Court". Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 11 September 1891. from the original on 30 March 2014.
  12. ^ Evans 1828, p. 32.
  13. ^ "Ashton Court". The Gardeners' Chronicle: 233. 23 August 1879. from the original on 7 March 2014.
  14. ^ "Garden Party at Ashton Court". Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 22 July 1886. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  15. ^ "Garden Party at Ashton Court". Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 30 July 1885. from the original on 30 March 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  16. ^ "Ashton Court near Bristol". The Builder. 31: 18. 4 January 1873.
  17. ^ a b "Festivities at Ashton Court. Home Coming of Sir Greville and Lady Smythe". Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 15 July 1885. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  18. ^ Bond 1998, p. 115.
  19. ^ Bond 1998, p. 118.
  20. ^ "Lady Smyth at Ashton Court". Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 11 September 1891. from the original on 30 March 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  21. ^ "The Owners". University of the West of England. from the original on 13 February 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  22. ^ The Times (London), 30 Aug 1946; pg. 7;
  23. ^ a b c (PDF). Bristol City Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  24. ^ "National Archives Discovery Catalogue page, Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre". Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  25. ^ "National Archives Discovery Cataloge page, University of Bristol Special Collections". from the original on 16 June 2016. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  26. ^ a b c Pevsner 1973, p. 220.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g Pevsner 1973, p. 221.
  28. ^ Christopher Hussey, "Brympton D'Evercy, Somerset", in Country Life LXI (1927) pp 718ff, 7762ff, 775ff
  29. ^ . Bristol Post. 25 June 2010. Archived from the original on 2 March 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  30. ^ "The Royal Show. Today's Opening at Bristol". The Times. London. 30 June 1936. p. 13.
  31. ^ "Breuer in Bristol". Architects' Journal. 25 November 2010. from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  32. ^ . North Somerset Show. Archived from the original on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  33. ^ "Ashton Court Mansion 'saved from being gutted by fire'". BBC. from the original on 3 September 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  34. ^ "Ashton Court Mansion and Stables". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 16 March 2007.
  35. ^ . Heritage at Risk. English Heritage. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  36. ^ "Lower Lodge to Ashton Court and attached gates, railings and bollards". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 18 March 2007.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  38. ^ "Former perimeter wall of Ashton Court estate". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2007.
  39. ^ "Garden wall extending to south-east from east corner of Ashton". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2007.
  40. ^ "Two sets of railings, gates and gatepiers at south end of Ashton". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2007.
  41. ^ "Greville Smyth Park". Visit Bristol. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  42. ^ "Greville Smyth Park, Ashton Gate, England". Parks and Gardens UK. Parks and Gardens Data Services Ltd. from the original on 26 March 2014. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  43. ^ Burrough 1970.
  44. ^ . Bristol City Council. Archived from the original on 25 September 2010. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  45. ^ "Ashton Court parkrun – Weekly Free 5 km Timed Run". parkrun ashton court. from the original on 3 May 2014. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  46. ^ (PDF). English Nature. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 October 2006. Retrieved 13 June 2006.
  47. ^ . Reserves. Avon Wildlife Trust. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  48. ^ Green & Myles 2000, p. 249.
  49. ^ "Bristol's 700-year-old Domesday Oak tree future secured". BBC. 27 April 2011. from the original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  50. ^ (PDF). Bristol City Council. 6 September 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 April 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2013.

Bibliography

  • Bond, James (1998). Somerset Parks and Gardens. Somerset Books. ISBN 0-86183-465-8.
  • Burrough, T.H.B. (1970). Bristol. London: Studio Vista. ISBN 0-289-79804-3.
  • Collinson, John (1791). The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset. Cruttevell.
  • Evans, John (1828). The new guide, or, Picture of Bristol, with the beauties of Clifton: a descriptive arrangement of excursions in their vicinities. Bristol.
  • Gorges, Raymond (1944). The story of a family through eleven centuries, illustrated by portraits and pedigrees, being a history of the family of Gorges. Boston, Priv.
  • Green, Ian P.; Myles, Sarah (2000). The Flora of the Bristol Region. Pisces Publications. ISBN 1-874357-18-8.
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus (1973). The buildings of England: North Somerset and Bristol. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-071013-7.

External links

    ashton, court, mansion, house, estate, west, bristol, england, although, estate, lies, mainly, north, somerset, owned, city, bristol, mansion, stables, grade, listed, building, other, structures, estate, also, listed, location, within, somersetlocation, within. Ashton Court is a mansion house and estate to the west of Bristol in England Although the estate lies mainly in North Somerset it is owned by the City of Bristol The mansion and stables are a Grade I listed building 1 Other structures on the estate are also listed Ashton CourtLocation within SomersetLocation within BristolGeneral informationArchitectural styleMixedTown or cityBristolCountryEnglandCoordinates51 26 52 N 2 38 41 W 51 4479 N 2 6446 W 51 4479 2 6446 Coordinates 51 26 52 N 2 38 41 W 51 4479 N 2 6446 W 51 4479 2 6446Construction started1633ClientSmyth familyAshton Court has been the site of a manor house since the 11th century and has been developed by a series of owners since then From the 16th to 20th centuries it was owned by the Smyth family with each generation changing the house Designs by Humphry Repton were used for the landscaping in the early 19th century It was used as a military hospital in the First World War In 1936 it was used as the venue for the Royal Show and during the Second World War as an army transit camp In 1946 the last of the Smyth family died and the house fell into disrepair before its purchase in 1959 by Bristol City Council The estate developed from the original deer park and is Grade II listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England It is the venue for a variety of leisure activities including the now defunct Ashton Court Festival Bristol International Kite Festival and the Bristol International Balloon Fiesta It is home to charity The Forest of Avon Trust Contents 1 Early history 2 Thomas and Florence Smyth 3 Sir John Smyth 4 Sir Greville and Lady Emily Smyth 5 Archives 6 Architecture 7 Recent history 8 Location and surroundings 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly history EditAshton Court dates back to before the 11th century It is believed that a fortified manor stood on the site given to Geoffrey de Montbray Bishop of Coutances by William the Conqueror 2 In the Domesday Book it is referred to as a wealthy estate owned by the Bishop of Coutances with a manor house a great hall and courtyards entered through gatehouses 3 The property passed through successive owners and at the end of the 14th century it was considerably expanded when Thomas De Lions a nobleman originally from France obtained a permit to enclose a park for his manor The house was owned by the Choke family for some time In 1506 it was sold to Sir Giles Daubeney a knight and a Chamberlain of Henry VII Henry VIII gave the estate to Sir Thomas Arundel in 1541 and four years later in 1545 Sir Thomas sold it to John Smyth The Smyth family owned the property for the next 400 years 4 Smyth also bought the land which had been owned until the dissolution of the monasteries by Bath Abbey 5 He used the land to extend the deer park bringing him into conflict with the residents of Whitchurch who complained that he had used common land 6 Thomas and Florence Smyth Edit Thomas and Florence Smyth 1627 Thomas Smyth 1609 1642 was the first member of the family to make major alterations and additions to the original manor house He was a Member of Parliament and a successful lawyer In 1627 at the age of only seventeen he married Florence daughter of John Poulett 1st Baronet Poulett of Hinton St George 7 In 1635 Thomas added a new southern front which was in the style of Inigo Jones It was described by Collinson in 1791 in the following terms 8 The front is in length one hundred and forty three feet and consists below of three rooms the western one of which is a fine apartment ninety three feet long and twenty feet wide and contains several family and other portraits The back part of the house is very ancient and the court leading to the park westward is called Castle Court from its having been embattled and still retaining an old gateway similar to those adopted in baronial mansions The second court contains some of the offices and its entrance from without is under a low doorway between two lofty turrets one of which contains a bell and clock The stables and corresponding offices in the front court are of ancient date The whole contributes to a very venerable and picturesque building Ashton Court 1791 Further major additions were made to the building by Sir John Hugh Smyth 1734 1802 He inherited the estate in 1783 and added the new library to the north west of the house Sir John also asked the famous landscape designer Humphry Repton for advice about the east front of the house Repton drafted a plan but Sir John s death halted any further work on the house 3 However Repton s landscape designs were implemented by Sir John s successor Sir Hugh Smyth In his book Humphry Repton gave a detailed description of the old and newer parts of the house before the library additions and included a drawing of the eastern front of the house as he saw it in about 1790 9 Sir John Smyth Edit Sir John Smyth As reported by Esme Smyth Ashton Court s last resident Sir John Smyth 1776 1849 was responsible for the remodelling of the house In about 1940 she was interviewed by Raymond Gorges who was researching a book and she gave him an engraving of the house showing the additions that she said were made by Sir John 10 Sir John was a bachelor He was said by Lady Emily Smyth to be devoted to horses and kept an extensive stud 11 His importance as a major builder of Ashton Court is verified by John Evans who in 1828 wrote a book about Bristol and its surrounding area He said This seat of Sir John Smyth is a stately edifice It has of late been much enlarged with stables nearly as extensive as the house and also a park enclosed by a wall which is twelve feet high in the lowest part Two handsome lodges have also been added one of them built from a gothic design 12 Sir Greville and Lady Emily Smyth Edit Sir Greville Smyth Sir Greville Smyth inherited the property in 1852 and remained a bachelor until he was 48 years old During that time he undertook extensive renovations He also kept a very impressive garden which was described in detail in gardening magazines and newspapers 13 14 15 In 1872 he commissioned the well known architect Benjamin Ferrey to make additions which were described as follows The Western Wing has been rearranged but the principal parts of the works have been concentrated in the central portion of the buildings This part has been raised considerably and in a great measure rebuilt and is surmounted by two octagonal towers which rise to a height of 72 ft There is a covered passage running the south side of the courtyard which opens out into the court by the arcading of five bays 16 Dame Emily Smyth Even more extensive alterations were made between 1884 and 1885 Shortly before he married Emily the widow of George Oldham Edwards he employed the notable Bath architect Major Charles Edward Davis to transform the house The work took 18 months to complete A detailed description of the alterations was given in the Bristol Mercury 17 in 1885 He converted the stables in the south east wing to living areas which included a huge museum for his natural history collection He built a grand hall with richly carved oak panels In the west wing he built a massive carved oak staircase with twist bannisters and introduced perpendicular windows He also built a winter garden by enclosing the clock court This is now the Winter Garden Bar The following description of this elaborate room with a waterfall fountain is given in this newspaper article as follows This leads through two arched entrances to one of the most charming winter gardens of which any private mansion in the western counties can boast It has been formed out of what was formerly the open clock tower court which has been supplied with a glazed iron roof Round the tessellated flooring have been formed the gracefully curved flower borders edged with glazed tiling surmounted with rockery This rock work covered with moss and filled in with water plants luxuriant grasses and ferns margins an ornamental sheet of water of serpentine form from the surface of which jets of water are thrown into a huge basin shell one of the largest of the kind we have seen It is ingeniously constructed to form a waterfall the streams descending to a second basin shell just above the sheet of water Around this are some the choicest ferns and palms From the roof hang clusters of incandescent laps interspersed with baskets filled with gracefully drooping ferns and from the surface of the water lilies modestly rise 17 The Winter Garden Also in the 1880s 4 acres 1 6 ha of formal gardens were laid out including a terrace garden which is now a lawn a wilderness garden with basin fountain and a rose garden 18 Avenues of sequoias and cedars were planted along with other specimen trees 19 In 1891 Lady Emily Smyth held an interview where she outlined further details of these alterations made by Sir Greville She also gave a few details of some interesting secret rooms and passages in the medieval part of the building on the western side which she referred to as Drax s Kennel and The Fox s Hole 20 Sir Greville Smyth died in 1901 and Lady Emily Smyth died in 1914 21 The next and last residents of the house were Gilbert and Esme Smyth They lived there for the next thirty years Gilbert died in 1940 and Esme in 1946 and the house was left to their daughter Esme Francis Cavendish She and her husband tried to sell the house immediately in 1946 to help pay the death duties 22 However the Cavendish family did not succeed until thirteen years later in 1959 during which time the house was unoccupied and started to decay It was sold at this time to Bristol City Council who still owns it today 23 Archives EditArchives of the Ashton Court estate including estate management and estate office papers and personal papers of the Smyth family are held by Bristol Archives Ref AC online catalogue Bristol Archives also holds photos and papers about the redevelopment of Ashton Court mansion and stables Ref 43326 online catalogue and Ref 45390 online catalogue Other records relating to the Ashton Court estate are also held by Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre 24 and the University of Bristol Special Collections 25 Architecture Edit Ashton Court displays a profusion of architectural styles Here various wings and juxtapositions display Strawberry Hill Gothic to the left Italian Renaissance windows to the right a Victorian Porte cochere in the centre simple Tudor mullion and Gothic tracery windows plus pseudo medieval battlements and chaste English renaissance gables Due to successive remodellings and enlargements the architecture at Ashton Court is complex and seldom what it seems The core of the house a 15th century manor has been obliterated by later wings which have in turn been remodelled and altered most substantially around 1635 26 Therefore the plan of the house has evolved as irregular with many juxtapositions and little cohesion while the majority of the house was built in the 17th century a time of classical architecture remodelling and alteration to the fenestration has created an overall Gothic appearance 26 In the early 19th century the house was given a 300 feet 91 m long facade in an attempt to provide some uniformity and some classical grandeur 26 However even here the architecture does not remain faithful to a single style At the centre of this facade is a much altered Tudor gatehouse probably built in the 16th century as a portal to the 14th century manor house 27 In order to create the long facade the existing stables to the right of the gatehouse were converted to domestic use and given seven bays of Gothic mullioned windows 27 To the left of the gatehouse the flanking south west wing is of a different style 27 This classically designed wing has been attributed to Inigo Jones but without supporting evidence 27 as with a similar attribution at Brympton d Evercy also in Somerset it seems to be based solely on the alternating segmental and pointed pediments over the groundfloor windows and ignoring the irregularities in their spacings and placings which Jones is unlikely to have countenanced 28 To give the long facade with its two wings of contrasting architectural styles a uniting common feature the third story of oval windows of the left hand wings which was then topped with a Jacobean balustrade was repeated above the Gothic right hand wing however inexplicably the attempt at classical unity was broken by the use of castellations instead of a balustrade on the right hand side 27 Overall its length contrasting styles high gatehouse and lack of symmetry give the facade a collegiate rather than domestic appearance The focal point of the facade the gatehouse has multi faceted turrets at its corners In 1885 the gatehouse was given a Gothic makeover which included raising its height and adding the fan vaulting to the ceiling of the passage leading not to a great base court as such grandiose architectural feature would suggest but to a small glazed inner courtyard the Winter Garden 27 The north wing was included in the remodelling work of 1805 and given ogee headed windows in the delicate Strawberry Hill Gothic style popular at turn of the 19th century it was a forerunner of the more medieval ecclesiastical Gothic style that was to characterise the architecture of the 19th century and employed at Ashton Court during the 1885 alterations 27 Recent history Edit The Clifton Lodge gate at the junction of the A369 and B3129 During the First World War the estate was used as a military hospital 23 and in the Second World War was requisitioned by the War Office and used in turn as a transit camp RAF HQ and US Army Command HQ 29 The estate was the venue for the 1936 Royal Show 30 One of the exhibition buildings despite its temporary nature was an innovative piece of modernist architecture still remembered as the Gane Pavilion It was designed by Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer as a show house for the Bristol furniture manufacturer Crofton Gane 31 For most of the 20th century Ashton Court was the venue for the North Somerset Show however this is now held in Wraxall 32 In 1946 the last resident of Ashton Court Dame Esme Smyth died After the house became derelict it was taken over by the City in 1959 23 Restoration has been an ongoing process since then but even after extensive investment by both the council and from Heritage Lottery Fund grants presently only about a quarter of the building is occupied or usable The available facilities of the house are rented out for business conferences parties and weddings In 2013 a fire damaged the northern wing It was contained by Avon Fire and Rescue Service otherwise the rest of the building would have been at risk 33 Between 1974 and 2007 the Ashton Court Festival was held in the grounds of the estate The festival was a weekend event which featured a variety of local bands and national headliners Mainly aimed at local residents the festival did not have overnight camping facilities and was financed by donations and benefit gigs Starting as a small one day festival in 1974 the festival grew during succeeding years and was said to be Britain s largest free festival until changes brought on by government legislation resulted in compulsory fees and security fencing being introduced After problems were caused by a temporary move to Hengrove Park in 2001 due to the foot and mouth crisis and a washout in 2007 the organisers declared bankruptcy in 2007 The mansion house and stables have been designated by Historic England as a Grade I listed building 34 The house is listed on the Heritage at Risk Register and described as being in slow decay 35 The lower lodge to Ashton Court and attached gates railings and bollards which were built in 1805 by Henry Wood are Grade II listed buildings 36 The lower lodge was fully refurbished in 2016 with funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund and is now named Ashton Gatehouse The building is now a heritage site managed by Ashton Park School 37 The garden and perimeter walls and railings are also listed 38 39 40 Since 2018 the mansion house has been managed by Bristol charity Artspace Lifespace allowing the building to be open to the public for a variety of events Ashton Court at dusk during a corporate eventLocation and surroundings Edit Aerial view of Ashton Court Estate The house stands within a large estate spanning the boundary between Bristol and North Somerset approximately 2 kilometres 1 2 mi from the city centre It is on the western side of the River Avon close to the Clifton Suspension Bridge and the suburb of Leigh Woods and the Leigh Woods National Nature Reserve which are east of Ashton Court To the north and west is open countryside The estate was previously much larger than it is today and included areas which are now suburbs of Bristol including Ashton Gate Ashton Vale and Southville where the Greville Smyth Park is located The land for the park was donated by the Smyth family and then landscaped by the city council 41 42 The estate covers 850 acres 340 ha of woods and open grassland laid out by Humphry Repton 43 It includes two pitch and putt golf courses a disc golf course an orienteering course and horse riding and mountain bike trails 44 Bristol s weekly parkrun event a free timed 5 km run organised by volunteers is held at Ashton Court 45 There is a deer park which was started in the 14th century and extended in the 16th and 17th centuries There are still two areas of the estate with deer enclosures The park contains a great variety of wildlife much of the site an area of 210 31 hectares was notified in 1998 as a Site of Special Scientific Interest due to the presence of rare woodland beetles including Ctesias serra Phloiotrya vaudoueri and Eledona agricola 46 The 2 37 hectares of Ashton Court Meadow is managed as a nature reserve by the Avon Wildlife Trust It contains a wide range of flowering plants including wild carrot yellow wort and field scabious Some unusual parasitic plants are also found here such as common broomrape which feeds off clovers and yellow rattle which feeds partly off grass 47 Clarken Combe at the western edge of the estate is a woodland area with a range of plant species including narrow lipped helleborine which grows here in small numbers under beech 48 In 2002 a 700 year old oak tree called the Domesday Oak was selected by The Tree Council as one of 50 Great British Trees In 2011 a crack appeared in the trunk and oak support beams were fitted to support the tree The supports were only partly successful and a section of the tree collapsed the remaining part of the tree was pruned to reduce the weight of the surviving section 49 50 See also EditList of Grade I listed buildings in North SomersetReferences Edit Historic England Ashton Court Mansion and Stables Grade I 1129841 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 8 July 2020 Collinson 1791 pp 289 292 a b Pleydell Smithyman Ltd Ashton Court Estate Strategic Management Plan PDF Bristol City Council p 26 Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2012 Retrieved 1 March 2014 Collinson 1791 p 292 Bond 1998 p 45 Bond 1998 p 58 Yerby George Hunneyball Paul Smyth Thomas c 1609 1642 of Ashton Court Long Ashton Som History of Parliament The History of Parliament Trust Archived from the original on 5 March 2014 Retrieved 1 March 2014 Collinson 1791 p 294 Loudon J C 1840 The landscape gardening and landscape architecture of the late Humphrey Repton esq being his entire works on these subjects Loudon p 296 Archived from the original on 2 April 2016 Gorges 1944 p 113 Lady Smyth at Ashton Court Bristol Mercury and Daily Post 11 September 1891 Archived from the original on 30 March 2014 Evans 1828 p 32 Ashton Court The Gardeners Chronicle 233 23 August 1879 Archived from the original on 7 March 2014 Garden Party at Ashton Court Bristol Mercury and Daily Post 22 July 1886 Retrieved 1 March 2014 Garden Party at Ashton Court Bristol Mercury and Daily Post 30 July 1885 Archived from the original on 30 March 2014 Retrieved 1 March 2014 Ashton Court near Bristol The Builder 31 18 4 January 1873 a b Festivities at Ashton Court Home Coming of Sir Greville and Lady Smythe Bristol Mercury and Daily Post 15 July 1885 Retrieved 1 March 2014 Bond 1998 p 115 Bond 1998 p 118 Lady Smyth at Ashton Court Bristol Mercury and Daily Post 11 September 1891 Archived from the original on 30 March 2014 Retrieved 1 March 2014 The Owners University of the West of England Archived from the original on 13 February 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2014 The Times London 30 Aug 1946 pg 7 a b c History of Ashton Court Estate PDF Bristol City Council Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2012 Retrieved 2 March 2014 National Archives Discovery Catalogue page Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre Retrieved 25 February 2016 National Archives Discovery Cataloge page University of Bristol Special Collections Archived from the original on 16 June 2016 Retrieved 25 February 2016 a b c Pevsner 1973 p 220 a b c d e f g Pevsner 1973 p 221 Christopher Hussey Brympton D Evercy Somerset in Country Life LXI 1927 pp 718ff 7762ff 775ff Part derelict mansion is city s new party central Bristol Post 25 June 2010 Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Retrieved 2 March 2014 The Royal Show Today s Opening at Bristol The Times London 30 June 1936 p 13 Breuer in Bristol Architects Journal 25 November 2010 Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 13 October 2013 About NSAS North Somerset Show Archived from the original on 10 December 2014 Retrieved 19 May 2015 Ashton Court Mansion saved from being gutted by fire BBC Archived from the original on 3 September 2013 Retrieved 2 March 2014 Ashton Court Mansion and Stables historicengland org uk Retrieved 16 March 2007 Ashton Court Long Ashton North Somerset UA Heritage at Risk English Heritage Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 14 October 2013 Lower Lodge to Ashton Court and attached gates railings and bollards historicengland org uk Retrieved 18 March 2007 Historic Ashton Court Gatehouse restored Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 27 November 2017 Former perimeter wall of Ashton Court estate historicengland org uk Retrieved 15 May 2007 Garden wall extending to south east from east corner of Ashton historicengland org uk Retrieved 15 May 2007 Two sets of railings gates and gatepiers at south end of Ashton historicengland org uk Retrieved 15 May 2007 Greville Smyth Park Visit Bristol Retrieved 26 March 2014 Greville Smyth Park Ashton Gate England Parks and Gardens UK Parks and Gardens Data Services Ltd Archived from the original on 26 March 2014 Retrieved 26 March 2014 Burrough 1970 Ashton Court Estate Bristol City Council Archived from the original on 25 September 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2010 Ashton Court parkrun Weekly Free 5 km Timed Run parkrun ashton court Archived from the original on 3 May 2014 Retrieved 26 March 2014 Ashton Court PDF English Nature Archived from the original PDF on 13 October 2006 Retrieved 13 June 2006 Ashton Court Meadow Reserves Avon Wildlife Trust Archived from the original on 2 July 2011 Retrieved 29 September 2010 Green amp Myles 2000 p 249 Bristol s 700 year old Domesday Oak tree future secured BBC 27 April 2011 Archived from the original on 30 April 2011 Retrieved 6 February 2013 Bristol Tree Forum Minutes PDF Bristol City Council 6 September 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 4 April 2013 Retrieved 6 February 2013 Bibliography EditBond James 1998 Somerset Parks and Gardens Somerset Books ISBN 0 86183 465 8 Burrough T H B 1970 Bristol London Studio Vista ISBN 0 289 79804 3 Collinson John 1791 The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset Cruttevell Evans John 1828 The new guide or Picture of Bristol with the beauties of Clifton a descriptive arrangement of excursions in their vicinities Bristol Gorges Raymond 1944 The story of a family through eleven centuries illustrated by portraits and pedigrees being a history of the family of Gorges Boston Priv Green Ian P Myles Sarah 2000 The Flora of the Bristol Region Pisces Publications ISBN 1 874357 18 8 Pevsner Nikolaus 1973 The buildings of England North Somerset and Bristol Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 071013 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ashton Court Photos and information on Ashton Court estate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ashton Court amp oldid 1072248759, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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