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Wotton House

Wotton House, Wotton Underwood, Buckinghamshire, England, is a stately home built between 1704 and 1714, to a design very similar to that of the contemporary version of Buckingham House. The house is an example of English Baroque and a Grade I listed building. The architect is uncertain although William Winde, the designer of Buckingham House, has been suggested. The grounds were laid out by George London and Henry Wise with a formal parterre and a double elm avenue leading down to a lake. Fifty years later William Pitt the Elder and Capability Brown improved the landscape, creating pleasure grounds with two lakes. After a fire gutted the main house in 1820 Richard Grenville, 1st Earl Temple, commissioned John Soane to rebuild it. After the 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, the last direct Grenville male heir, died in 1889, the house was let to a succession of tenants; including, notably; the philanthropist, Leo Bernard William Bonn (1850-1929) who became deaf while residing at Wotton, and later founded (1911) what became the RNID. His son and heir, the decorated First World War hero, Major Walter Basil Louis Bonn, DSO, MC, MA (Oxon.) FRSA, FZSL (1885-1973) is also listed as resident at Wotton House; in the New College archives, at Oxford University; during his three years as an Oxford undergraduate, there, 1903–1906, while living fifteen miles away from his family home of many years, at Wotton House.

Wotton House
TypeHouse
LocationWotton Underwood, Buckinghamshire
Coordinates51°50′24″N 1°00′23″W / 51.8401°N 1.0065°W / 51.8401; -1.0065
Built1704-1714
ArchitectWilliam Winde, later John Soane
Architectural style(s)English Baroque
Governing bodyPrivate
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameWotton House, with walls to pavilions
Designated25 October 1951
Reference no.1124221
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameThe Clock Pavilion, Wotton House
Designated25 October 1951
Reference no.1275066
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameThe South Pavilion, Wotton House
Designated25 October 1951
Reference no.1332825
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameEntrance Gates and screen across east front of Wotton House, with gazebo and walls to pavilions
Designated25 October 1951
Reference no.1124222
Location of Wotton House in Buckinghamshire

In 1929 Wotton was bought by Major Michael Beaumont MP who renovated it. In 1947 Beaumont sold the estate to a charity who divided the grounds into small parcels and let the main house to two boys' schools. By 1957 the house had become derelict and was due to be demolished when Elaine Brunner found it and with the help of the architect Donald Insall restored most of the Soane features. Her daughter and son-in-law David Gladstone have continued the work she started. The South Pavilion (the former coach house) was sold separately in 1947. It has had a number of notable owners including Sir Arthur Bryant and Sir John Gielgud, and is now co-owned by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his wife Cherie, as well as David Gladstone, with Gladstone owning the main building (shown above) and the former British Prime Minister owning the smaller house next to it, with the fields of land being co-owned.

History edit

 
Armorials of Grenville of Wotton Underwood, Buckinghamshire: Vert, on a cross argent five torteaux

Since the twelfth century there had been a manor house at Wotton Underwood owned by the Grenville family. In 1704 Richard Grenville (1646-1719) built Wotton House on a new site on a mound looking down to a natural lake. The design was very similar to that of Buckingham House which was built at the same time and later became Buckingham Palace. The architect is unknown, but Sir Howard Colvin suggested John Fitch;[a] John Millar believes it could be by Elizabeth Wilbraham;[1] while Historic England suggests William Winde,[2] whom Pevsner also references.[3]

In 1749 Richard Grenville, the elder brother of George Grenville (Prime Minister between 1763 and 1765), inherited Stowe House through his wife Hester, sister of Viscount Cobham. Wotton was then run in tandem with Stowe by the Viscount Cobham as owner. A fire destroyed the interior of the house in 1820 but the coach house and kitchen pavilion (the "Clock Pavilion") survived intact. Richard Grenville, Earl Temple (later Duke of Buckingham and Chandos), immediately engaged John Soane to restore the main house. Soane lowered the house, removing the top floor and reducing the height of the first floor windows, giving it a Georgian proportion. He made inventive use of the existing floor plans and created a three-storey, top-lit "Tribune", alongside a new stone staircase, in place of the old entrance hall.[4] With its Soane interiors Wotton had a succession of Grenville occupiers until 1889, when the 3rd Duke of Buckingham, the last direct male heir, died, the house was let to a succession of tenants. It was rented and then bought by Michael Beaumont (MP for Aylesbury) in 1929 and had it renovated by the architect Arthur Stanley George Butler,[b] concealing all of Soane's detailing including the central three-storey tribune.[2]

When Beaumont moved to Kildare in Ireland,[5] the house was sold to a charity, the Merchant Venturers of Bristol. It was neglected down through the Second World War (when it was not requisitioned), but it was put up for sale shortly thereafter.[6] After the war much of the grounds were sold in small parcels and in the early 1950s the building was used by two boys' boarding schools, Wotton House Boys' School followed by Cokethorpe School (since relocated to near Witney).[7]

Restoration of the main house edit

Elaine (Mrs Patrick) Brunner purchased the main house and the Clock Pavilion from Buckinghamshire County Council for £6,000 in 1957, two weeks before it was scheduled for demolition.[8] Brunner engaged Donald Insall Associates to carry out extensive work on the house, repairing the dilapidations, undoing most of the Butler alterations and restoring Soane's architectural details. However, the central feature of Soane's redesign, the "Tribune", which had been destroyed by Butler, was still unrestored when she died in 1998.[8] The house passed to April, Brunner's daughter and her husband David Gladstone.[8][c] The grounds are open to the public at least one day a week during the summer months, but viewing of the house is by appointment only.[7] In 2007 David Gladstone held a conference at Wotton in an attempt to determine the name of the original architect of the house. The conference generated at least two follow up papers: Howard Colvin (2010) proposed that John Fitch may have been the original architect, and later the same year John Millar (2010) proposed that it may have been Elizabeth Wilbraham (1632–1705).[d][1]

Conversion of the Coach House into the South Pavilion edit

The original Coach House (later re-christened the South Pavilion) and the walled formal garden were purchased by Tristram Gilbert and Andre DuGuay shortly before Elaine Brunner purchased the main house. They restored both and lived there until about 1965. The walled garden was opened to the public. The South Pavilion was sold to Sir Arthur Bryant, the historian, and then to Sir John Gielgud who, photographs show, further restored it. In 2000 Gielgud died there. In 2008 it was bought by Tony and Cherie Blair for £4m.[9]

History of the grounds edit

In 1726 Richard Grenville inherited from his father the Wotton estate, which yielded a rental income of over £3000 per annum.[10] In 1735 he introduced an Enclosure Act in Parliament which cleared the area of dwellings, enabling the transformation during the 1750s of the London & Wise garden into the new style of natural landscape.[citation needed] In 1754 another Hester, sister of Richard and George, married William Pitt the Elder at Wotton and soon took over the project that Richard had envisioned. By that date Richard had taken over at Stowe and George was living at Wotton.[11] Capability Brown had left Stowe House in 1749 where he had been working as head gardener[12] and was brought in to help Pitt execute the project, in particular the extensive water works. It is not known exactly what the relative roles and contributions of Pitt and Brown were, although Pitt was a well-known landscape designer in his own right. The Pleasure Grounds cover 200 acres and incorporate two lakes, one of 35 acres and one of 12, joined by a canal.[11] They are enclosed within a circular belt, as was common at the time, and the visitor encounters a series of temples, bridges and statues along the circuit.[13]

In April 1786 John Adams (the future second President of the United States on tour with Thomas Jefferson – who would serve as his vice-president before becoming president himself) spent a few days visiting some stately homes to the north west of London, and one of those they visited was Wotton. On their return to London Adams wrote "Stowe, Hagley, and Blenheim, are superb; Woburn, Caversham, and the Leasowes are beautiful. Wotton is both great and elegant, though neglected".[14] Jefferson noted in his diary: "But two gardeners. Much neglected".[citation needed] On hearing of the historically dilapidated state of the Park; on 17 April 1988, and following attendance of Divine Service, at the neighbouring Buckinghamshire Parish Church of Dinton (see Parish News: May 2018, 30th Anniversary Royal Visit) HRH The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, decided to make a dendrologically inspired visit to Wotton House, during the tenure of a thespian acquaintance; Sir John Gielgud; and while staying with the Cotton family, at nearby Tythrop Park; Her Royal Highness thus undertook an informal Royal Visit, in order to view the gates, park, and South Pavilion, at Wotton; accompanied by the former (1901-1911) Wotton House resident's great-grandson (Commissioner Philip Bonn of the International Tree Protection Commission - ITPC) together with Her Royal Highness's friend; Mr Ned Ryan; and the RPS; who followed at a discreet distance behind the Princess's Rolls-Royce; containing Her Royal Highness and the guests from the weekend house party at Tythrop Park, Kingsley, in an adjoining district of Buckinghamshire.

All the grounds were sold by Major Beaumont in 1947 and were bought by neighbouring farmers in parcels. Between 1957 and 1985 Elaine Brunner gradually bought back some 400 acres of the grounds. Since 1998 David Gladstone has overseen the restoration of much of the original scheme by his estate manager, Michael Harrison.[citation needed]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ John Fitch is not represented in Howard Colvin (1995), A Biographical Dictionary of British architects, 3rd ed.
  2. ^ Butler is better known as the author of publications concerning Sir Edwin Lutyens.
  3. ^ David Gladstone is a retired British diplomat and a descendant of the Victorian Prime Minister, William Gladstone.
  4. ^ Colvin's paper was published in the 2010 Georgian Group Journal (Millar 2010)

References edit

  1. ^ a b Millar 2010.
  2. ^ a b Historic England. "Wotton House (Grade I) (1124221)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  3. ^ Pevsner & Williamson 2003, pp. 764–766.
  4. ^ Stroud 1984, plates 180–182.
  5. ^ Wotton House 2015c.
  6. ^ Wotton House 2015b.
  7. ^ a b Staff 2011.
  8. ^ a b c Ptolemy 1998.
  9. ^ Jones 2008.
  10. ^ Bellot 1993.
  11. ^ a b Historic England. "Wotton House Park and Garden (Grade I) (1000608)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  12. ^ Hyams 1971, p. 14.
  13. ^ Wotton House 2015a.
  14. ^ Adams & Adams 1851, p. 394.

Sources edit

  • Adams, John; Adams, Charles Francis (1851). The Works of John Adams, Second President of the United States: Autobiography, continued. Diary. Essays and controversial papers of the Revolution. The Works of John Adams, Second President of the United States. Vol. 3. Little, Brown. p. 394.
  • New College, University of Oxford (academic records and bursary records) Walter Basil Louis Bonn, BA (Honours) MA c/o Leo Bonn, Esq, Wotton House (1903-1906)
  • Bellot, L.J. (1993). "Wild hares and red herrings: a case study of estate management in the eighteenth-century English countryside". The Huntington Library Quarterly. 56 (1): 15–39. doi:10.2307/3817717. JSTOR 3817717.
  • Hyams, Edward (1971). Humphry Repton and Capability Brown.
  • Jones, Sam (5 May 2008). "Blairs pay £4m for Gielgud's former home". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
  • Millar, John (11 November 2010). "The first woman architect". Architects' Journal.
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Williamson, Elizabeth (2003). Buckinghamshire. The Buildings Of England. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09584-8.
  • Ptolemy, Dean (10 April 1998). "Obituary of Elaine Brunner". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022.. The obituary discusses the restoration of the house.
  • Staff (2011). . Vip Internet Limited. Archived from the original on 31 March 2012.
  • Stroud, Dorothy (1984). Sir John Soane, Architect.
  • "The Pleasure Grounds". Wotton House. 11 May 2015a. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  • "Early History of the Grenville Family". Wotton House. 17 July 2015b. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  • "The House After the Grenvilles". Wotton House. 17 July 2015c. Retrieved 8 September 2017.

Further reading edit

  • Boddington, Andy. "Wotton House". dukesofbuckingham.org.uk. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  • Inskip, Peter (April 2004). "Soane and the Grenvilles". Apollo. CLIX (506). Retrieved 15 September 2011. Review: Peter Inskip traces the story of Sir John Soane's work at Stowe, Buckingham House, Brasenose College, and Wotton House.
  • Staff (July–September 2004). "Saving Wotton: The Remarkable Story of a Soane Country House". Catalogue of an exhibition held at Soane Museum. London: Sir John Soane's Museum. ISBN 0-9542284-7-2. Retrieved 15 September 2011.

wotton, house, this, article, about, house, buckinghamshire, house, surrey, surrey, wotton, underwood, buckinghamshire, england, stately, home, built, between, 1704, 1714, design, very, similar, that, contemporary, version, buckingham, house, house, example, e. This article is about the house in Buckinghamshire For the house in Surrey see Wotton House Surrey Wotton House Wotton Underwood Buckinghamshire England is a stately home built between 1704 and 1714 to a design very similar to that of the contemporary version of Buckingham House The house is an example of English Baroque and a Grade I listed building The architect is uncertain although William Winde the designer of Buckingham House has been suggested The grounds were laid out by George London and Henry Wise with a formal parterre and a double elm avenue leading down to a lake Fifty years later William Pitt the Elder and Capability Brown improved the landscape creating pleasure grounds with two lakes After a fire gutted the main house in 1820 Richard Grenville 1st Earl Temple commissioned John Soane to rebuild it After the 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos the last direct Grenville male heir died in 1889 the house was let to a succession of tenants including notably the philanthropist Leo Bernard William Bonn 1850 1929 who became deaf while residing at Wotton and later founded 1911 what became the RNID His son and heir the decorated First World War hero Major Walter Basil Louis Bonn DSO MC MA Oxon FRSA FZSL 1885 1973 is also listed as resident at Wotton House in the New College archives at Oxford University during his three years as an Oxford undergraduate there 1903 1906 while living fifteen miles away from his family home of many years at Wotton House Wotton HouseTypeHouseLocationWotton Underwood BuckinghamshireCoordinates51 50 24 N 1 00 23 W 51 8401 N 1 0065 W 51 8401 1 0065Built1704 1714ArchitectWilliam Winde later John SoaneArchitectural style s English BaroqueGoverning bodyPrivateListed Building Grade IOfficial nameWotton House with walls to pavilionsDesignated25 October 1951Reference no 1124221Listed Building Grade IOfficial nameThe Clock Pavilion Wotton HouseDesignated25 October 1951Reference no 1275066Listed Building Grade IOfficial nameThe South Pavilion Wotton HouseDesignated25 October 1951Reference no 1332825Listed Building Grade IOfficial nameEntrance Gates and screen across east front of Wotton House with gazebo and walls to pavilionsDesignated25 October 1951Reference no 1124222Location of Wotton House in Buckinghamshire In 1929 Wotton was bought by Major Michael Beaumont MP who renovated it In 1947 Beaumont sold the estate to a charity who divided the grounds into small parcels and let the main house to two boys schools By 1957 the house had become derelict and was due to be demolished when Elaine Brunner found it and with the help of the architect Donald Insall restored most of the Soane features Her daughter and son in law David Gladstone have continued the work she started The South Pavilion the former coach house was sold separately in 1947 It has had a number of notable owners including Sir Arthur Bryant and Sir John Gielgud and is now co owned by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his wife Cherie as well as David Gladstone with Gladstone owning the main building shown above and the former British Prime Minister owning the smaller house next to it with the fields of land being co owned Contents 1 History 1 1 Restoration of the main house 1 2 Conversion of the Coach House into the South Pavilion 2 History of the grounds 3 Footnotes 4 References 5 Sources 6 Further readingHistory edit nbsp Armorials of Grenville of Wotton Underwood Buckinghamshire Vert on a cross argent five torteauxSince the twelfth century there had been a manor house at Wotton Underwood owned by the Grenville family In 1704 Richard Grenville 1646 1719 built Wotton House on a new site on a mound looking down to a natural lake The design was very similar to that of Buckingham House which was built at the same time and later became Buckingham Palace The architect is unknown but Sir Howard Colvin suggested John Fitch a John Millar believes it could be by Elizabeth Wilbraham 1 while Historic England suggests William Winde 2 whom Pevsner also references 3 In 1749 Richard Grenville the elder brother of George Grenville Prime Minister between 1763 and 1765 inherited Stowe House through his wife Hester sister of Viscount Cobham Wotton was then run in tandem with Stowe by the Viscount Cobham as owner A fire destroyed the interior of the house in 1820 but the coach house and kitchen pavilion the Clock Pavilion survived intact Richard Grenville Earl Temple later Duke of Buckingham and Chandos immediately engaged John Soane to restore the main house Soane lowered the house removing the top floor and reducing the height of the first floor windows giving it a Georgian proportion He made inventive use of the existing floor plans and created a three storey top lit Tribune alongside a new stone staircase in place of the old entrance hall 4 With its Soane interiors Wotton had a succession of Grenville occupiers until 1889 when the 3rd Duke of Buckingham the last direct male heir died the house was let to a succession of tenants It was rented and then bought by Michael Beaumont MP for Aylesbury in 1929 and had it renovated by the architect Arthur Stanley George Butler b concealing all of Soane s detailing including the central three storey tribune 2 When Beaumont moved to Kildare in Ireland 5 the house was sold to a charity the Merchant Venturers of Bristol It was neglected down through the Second World War when it was not requisitioned but it was put up for sale shortly thereafter 6 After the war much of the grounds were sold in small parcels and in the early 1950s the building was used by two boys boarding schools Wotton House Boys School followed by Cokethorpe School since relocated to near Witney 7 Restoration of the main house edit Elaine Mrs Patrick Brunner purchased the main house and the Clock Pavilion from Buckinghamshire County Council for 6 000 in 1957 two weeks before it was scheduled for demolition 8 Brunner engaged Donald Insall Associates to carry out extensive work on the house repairing the dilapidations undoing most of the Butler alterations and restoring Soane s architectural details However the central feature of Soane s redesign the Tribune which had been destroyed by Butler was still unrestored when she died in 1998 8 The house passed to April Brunner s daughter and her husband David Gladstone 8 c The grounds are open to the public at least one day a week during the summer months but viewing of the house is by appointment only 7 In 2007 David Gladstone held a conference at Wotton in an attempt to determine the name of the original architect of the house The conference generated at least two follow up papers Howard Colvin 2010 proposed that John Fitch may have been the original architect and later the same year John Millar 2010 proposed that it may have been Elizabeth Wilbraham 1632 1705 d 1 Conversion of the Coach House into the South Pavilion edit The original Coach House later re christened the South Pavilion and the walled formal garden were purchased by Tristram Gilbert and Andre DuGuay shortly before Elaine Brunner purchased the main house They restored both and lived there until about 1965 The walled garden was opened to the public The South Pavilion was sold to Sir Arthur Bryant the historian and then to Sir John Gielgud who photographs show further restored it In 2000 Gielgud died there In 2008 it was bought by Tony and Cherie Blair for 4m 9 History of the grounds editIn 1726 Richard Grenville inherited from his father the Wotton estate which yielded a rental income of over 3000 per annum 10 In 1735 he introduced an Enclosure Act in Parliament which cleared the area of dwellings enabling the transformation during the 1750s of the London amp Wise garden into the new style of natural landscape citation needed In 1754 another Hester sister of Richard and George married William Pitt the Elder at Wotton and soon took over the project that Richard had envisioned By that date Richard had taken over at Stowe and George was living at Wotton 11 Capability Brown had left Stowe House in 1749 where he had been working as head gardener 12 and was brought in to help Pitt execute the project in particular the extensive water works It is not known exactly what the relative roles and contributions of Pitt and Brown were although Pitt was a well known landscape designer in his own right The Pleasure Grounds cover 200 acres and incorporate two lakes one of 35 acres and one of 12 joined by a canal 11 They are enclosed within a circular belt as was common at the time and the visitor encounters a series of temples bridges and statues along the circuit 13 In April 1786 John Adams the future second President of the United States on tour with Thomas Jefferson who would serve as his vice president before becoming president himself spent a few days visiting some stately homes to the north west of London and one of those they visited was Wotton On their return to London Adams wrote Stowe Hagley and Blenheim are superb Woburn Caversham and the Leasowes are beautiful Wotton is both great and elegant though neglected 14 Jefferson noted in his diary But two gardeners Much neglected citation needed On hearing of the historically dilapidated state of the Park on 17 April 1988 and following attendance of Divine Service at the neighbouring Buckinghamshire Parish Church of Dinton see Parish News May 2018 30th Anniversary Royal Visit HRH The Princess Margaret Countess of Snowdon decided to make a dendrologically inspired visit to Wotton House during the tenure of a thespian acquaintance Sir John Gielgud and while staying with the Cotton family at nearby Tythrop Park Her Royal Highness thus undertook an informal Royal Visit in order to view the gates park and South Pavilion at Wotton accompanied by the former 1901 1911 Wotton House resident s great grandson Commissioner Philip Bonn of the International Tree Protection Commission ITPC together with Her Royal Highness s friend Mr Ned Ryan and the RPS who followed at a discreet distance behind the Princess s Rolls Royce containing Her Royal Highness and the guests from the weekend house party at Tythrop Park Kingsley in an adjoining district of Buckinghamshire All the grounds were sold by Major Beaumont in 1947 and were bought by neighbouring farmers in parcels Between 1957 and 1985 Elaine Brunner gradually bought back some 400 acres of the grounds Since 1998 David Gladstone has overseen the restoration of much of the original scheme by his estate manager Michael Harrison citation needed Footnotes edit John Fitch is not represented in Howard Colvin 1995 A Biographical Dictionary of British architects 3rd ed Butler is better known as the author of publications concerning Sir Edwin Lutyens David Gladstone is a retired British diplomat and a descendant of the Victorian Prime Minister William Gladstone Colvin s paper was published in the 2010 Georgian Group Journal Millar 2010 References edit a b Millar 2010 a b Historic England Wotton House Grade I 1124221 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 21 May 2020 Pevsner amp Williamson 2003 pp 764 766 Stroud 1984 plates 180 182 Wotton House 2015c Wotton House 2015b a b Staff 2011 a b c Ptolemy 1998 Jones 2008 Bellot 1993 a b Historic England Wotton House Park and Garden Grade I 1000608 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 21 May 2020 Hyams 1971 p 14 Wotton House 2015a Adams amp Adams 1851 p 394 Sources editAdams John Adams Charles Francis 1851 The Works of John Adams Second President of the United States Autobiography continued Diary Essays and controversial papers of the Revolution The Works of John Adams Second President of the United States Vol 3 Little Brown p 394 New College University of Oxford academic records and bursary records Walter Basil Louis Bonn BA Honours MA c o Leo Bonn Esq Wotton House 1903 1906 Bellot L J 1993 Wild hares and red herrings a case study of estate management in the eighteenth century English countryside The Huntington Library Quarterly 56 1 15 39 doi 10 2307 3817717 JSTOR 3817717 Hyams Edward 1971 Humphry Repton and Capability Brown Jones Sam 5 May 2008 Blairs pay 4m for Gielgud s former home The Guardian London Retrieved 6 May 2008 Millar John 11 November 2010 The first woman architect Architects Journal Pevsner Nikolaus Williamson Elizabeth 2003 Buckinghamshire The Buildings Of England Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09584 8 Ptolemy Dean 10 April 1998 Obituary of Elaine Brunner The Independent Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 The obituary discusses the restoration of the house Staff 2011 Wotton House Vip Internet Limited Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Stroud Dorothy 1984 Sir John Soane Architect The Pleasure Grounds Wotton House 11 May 2015a Retrieved 8 September 2017 Early History of the Grenville Family Wotton House 17 July 2015b Retrieved 8 September 2017 The House After the Grenvilles Wotton House 17 July 2015c Retrieved 8 September 2017 Further reading editBoddington Andy Wotton House dukesofbuckingham org uk Retrieved 15 September 2011 Inskip Peter April 2004 Soane and the Grenvilles Apollo CLIX 506 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Review Peter Inskip traces the story of Sir John Soane s work at Stowe Buckingham House Brasenose College and Wotton House Staff July September 2004 Saving Wotton The Remarkable Story of a Soane Country House Catalogue of an exhibition held at Soane Museum London Sir John Soane s Museum ISBN 0 9542284 7 2 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wotton House amp oldid 1200588976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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