Aston Clinton House

Coordinates: 51°47′39″N 0°43′08″W / 51.7943°N 0.7190°W / 51.7943; -0.7190
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Aston Clinton House probably late 19th century
Green Park near Aston Clinton now

Aston Clinton House (also known as Green Park though referred to as simply Aston Clinton by the Rothschild family) was a large mansion to the south-east of the village of Aston Clinton in Buckinghamshire, England.

History

Rothschild period

In 1851,

Italianate
house with verandahs and a large porte-cochère. Many workers' cottages were built, and two schools and a village hall set up under Rothschild patronage.

On the death of Lady

Constance, Lady Battersea and Annie, The Hon. Mrs. Eliot Yorke, who shared it as a holiday home, spending a few weeks together there each summer. They developed horticulture in the gardens which became full of rare plants. Cyril Flower, 1st Baron Battersea contributed to the development of the gardens.[1]

In the

First World War, like the adjoining Halton House and estate, Aston Clinton House was lent to the War Office, becoming in September 1914 the HQ of 21st Infantry Division. 21st Division was a "New Army" division, part of Kitchener's Army, and it was formed-up and trained on Rothschild land in Buckinghamshire, initially in Tring but in 1915 on the Halton and Aston Clinton estates. Four brigades of field artillery and one heavy battery received their advanced training in the grounds of Aston Clinton House in the spring and summer of 1915, including extensive gas offensive and defensive training. Final inspection of the division by Lord Kitchener
occurred in August 1915 and the move to France took place from 2 to 13 September 1915.

In 1923, the Rothschilds sold the house to Dr Albert Edward Bredin Crawford for £15,000.[1]

After 1923

At the start of the

Second World War the house was the Green Park Hotel, but during the War the stables were used by EKCO, an electronics company from Southend-on-Sea, Essex, as its main headquarters and for radar research and development, and the main house was used as a hospital for war wounded.[2]
It had been a boys' prep school (where Evelyn Waugh obtained his second post as a junior master(in 1925)), followed by a further brief spell as a hotel. The main building was demolished between 1956 and 1958.

Buckinghamshire County Council then acquired the property with the proviso that it be used for educational purposes. Today the estate is used as a residential training centre for young people, operated by Kingswood Learning and Leisure Group.[3] The original ornamental features of the extended garden still remain, incorporated into the site now called Green Park. All that remain of the buildings of the estate are the stables, used as part of the training centre, and the lodge in Stablebridge Road.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c DJPMedia (11 June 2018). "ASTON CLINTON HOUSE". HOUSE AND HERITAGE. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  2. ^ Origins Journal of the Buckinghamshire Family History Society, December 2006
  3. ^ "Green Park Bucks | Outdoor Education | Kingswood".

External links

51°47′39″N 0°43′08″W / 51.7943°N 0.7190°W / 51.7943; -0.7190