Ascott House

Coordinates: 51°53′44″N 0°42′22″W / 51.89545°N 0.70617°W / 51.89545; -0.70617
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Ascott House
Country house
LocationAscott, Buckinghamshire, England
Coordinates51°53′44″N 0°42′22″W / 51.89545°N 0.70617°W / 51.89545; -0.70617

Ascott House, sometimes referred to as simply Ascott, is a

Grade II* listed building[1] in the hamlet of Ascott near Wing in Buckinghamshire
, England. It is set in a 32-acre / 13 hectare estate.

Ascott House was originally a farm house, built in the reign of

estate). The Rothschild family had begun to acquire vast tracts of land in Buckinghamshire earlier in the century, on which they built a series of large mansions from 1852 onwards. Baron Mayer gave the house at Ascott to his nephew Leopold de Rothschild, who transformed it over the following decades into the substantial yet informal country house
that it is today.

Architecture

The garden front. From 1874 until the 1930s the house was almost constantly being extended.

Leopold de Rothschild, whose principal country residence was Gunnersbury Park, used Ascott at first as a hunting box, but realising the limitations imposed by its modest size, in 1874 he employed the architect George Devey to enlarge it. The present half-timbered house is largely the result of that commission. Devey attempted to design a house that rambled as though it had grown and developed over centuries. The project became a lifetime work for Devey as the house was continually expanded during the remainder of the 19th century. The rambling and climbing shrubs he had planted as part of the design of the facades that Mary Gladstone described in her memoirs are no longer there.

The style of architecture, which could be described as "English cottage meets

chateau as at Waddesdon Manor. The architecture at Ascott was not intended to faithfully reproduce that of an earlier era. Devey was a forerunner of the Arts and Crafts movement and had developed a rustic style of his own. Huge bay windows provide views over the Chiltern Hills. Multiple gables of varying heights with roof lines sweeping to different levels resemble those later designed by the more notable Edwin Lutyens
.

Interior

Ludolph de Jongh (1616–1679), bought by Baron Lionel de Rothschild in 1842

On the death of Mrs. Leopold de Rothschild in 1937 the house was inherited by her son Anthony Gustav de Rothschild. He and his wife, the former Yvonne D'Anvers, enlarged the house further, and were responsible for the present interiors, full of notable paintings and (unusually for a Rothschild House) a large collection of 18th-century English furniture.

The ground floor contains the principal suite of large reception rooms, and while these rooms are furnished with works of art and furniture, they are low ceilinged, and, continuing the informal concept of the design, are in no way intended to be state rooms. The entrance hall is notable for its large paintings by Thomas Gainsborough, George Romney, and Joshua Reynolds and the large work by George Stubbs, "Five Mares". The dining room, now decorated with what appear to be Dutch tiles but is in fact trompe-l'œil, contains a collection of small, mainly Dutch, paintings from the 16th and 17th centuries by such artists as Aelbert Cuyp, Adriaen van Ostade and Jan Steen.

The works of art continue through the common room, with its portrait of a prelate attributed to Lorenzo Lotto. The Drawing Room today displays a collection of blue Chinese ceramics with examples from the Han dynasty c. 206 BC, to the Qing dynasty which lasted from 1644 until 1911. This room contains the painting of the Madonna and Child with St. John by Andrea del Sarto of 1520.

In 1936 the Billiards Room was transformed into a library to house the many volumes amassed by Anthony de Rothschild. One of the most comfortable rooms in the house, its book-lined walls are only interrupted by Gainsborough's full-length portrait of the Duchess of Richmond, and various other masterpieces. Standing on a console table is Tiepolo's "The Assumption of the Virgin". The room also contains furniture by Thomas Chippendale and ancient Chinese ceramics.

Gardens

The "Madeira Walk", a path between two mirror herbaceous borders, terminated by George Devey's classical pavilion

The extensive manicured gardens were laid out on the advice of the garden designer Sir Harry Veitch c. 1902 by Leopold de Rothschild as a wedding present to his wife. A sundial made entirely of topiary complete with Latin numerals proclaims in clipped yew: "Light and shade by turn, but love always".

Thomas Waldo Story

Closest to the south front of the house are paved areas of gardens in the style of

Thomas Waldo Story. Story was also responsible for the fountain in the Dutch flower garden. This garden, so named for its displays of tulips in spring, is approached by descending a flight of steps through a rock garden, complete with dripping grotto and artificial stalagmites. In the centre of the garden Story's tall fountain, crowned by Cupid
supported by dolphins, is surrounded by a formal bedding scheme.

From the entrance front's adjacent garden of topiarised

thatched
summerhouse also designed by George Devey.

Cricket ground

Cricket was first played at Ascott House on 28 August 1880, when an eleven brought from London played an eleven selected by a Mr. Tennant, whose players were partly from London and partly from the area surrounding the estate. Leopold de Rothschild was present for this first match.

Minor Counties Championship against Hertfordshire, playing there regularly once a season to 1979.[3]

The county returned to Ascott in 1998 to play an

MCCA Knockout Trophy match against Berkshire. Minor Counties Championship cricket was last played there in 2003,[3] with Buckinghamshire's last venture to the ground coming 2009 in the MCCA Knockout Trophy against Lincolnshire.[4] The ground held a List A match once, which came in the 2003 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy when first-class county Gloucestershire were the visitors.[5] The match was something of a mismatch, with Gloucestershire scoring a massive 401/7, then bowling Buckinghamshire out for 77 to win the match by 324 runs.[6]

Ascott today

Ascott House, with some of its important

Sir Evelyn de Rothschild
, who died in 2022. He added further works of art and ceramics to the collection and much of what is seen in the collection is still privately owned by the Rothschild family.

Sir Evelyn de Rothschild also expanded the estate to its present size of approximately 3200 acres (13 km2). The estate contains many miles of new road-side tree planting, well-kept hedging, and cropping and planting of new woodland but retains some of the older permanent pasture and small fields. A major new road, the

A505 ploughs through the area between the house and its Stud Farm
, but has been disguised by dense woodland planting.

Postcards and guidebooks are available for sale within Ascott House. The house retains very much the feel of a private house, and is open to the public in the afternoon of many weekdays during summer.

See also

References

  1. ^ Historic England. "Ascott House (Grade II*) (1291467)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
  2. ^ "Cricket at Ascott". www.ascottestate.co.uk. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  3. ^ a b "Minor Counties Championship Matches played on Ascott Park, Wing". CricketArchive. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  4. ^ "Minor Counties Trophy Matches played on Ascott Park, Wing". CricketArchive. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  5. ^ "List A Matches played on Ascott Park, Wing". CricketArchive. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  6. ^ "Buckinghamshire v Gloucestershire, 2003 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy". CricketArchive. Retrieved 15 August 2011.

Further reading

  • Clifford Smith, H (1950). Country Life Magazine. London: Country Life.
  • National Trust (1963). The Ascott collection. The National Trust.

External links