Flitwick Manor
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2022) |
Flitwick Manor | |
---|---|
Type | House |
Location | Flitwick, Bedfordshire |
Coordinates | 51°59′47″N 0°30′09″W / 51.9965°N 0.5024°W |
OS grid reference | TL0291534173 |
Built | 18th century, with earlier origins and later additions |
Built for | Edward Blofield |
Architectural style(s) |
|
Owner | Flitwick Town Council |
Listed Building – Grade II* | |
Official name | Flitwick Manor |
Designated | 22 October 1952 |
Reference no. | 1137690 |
Listed Building – Grade II | |
Official name | Grotto 50m west of Flitwick Manor |
Designated | 23 January 1961 |
Reference no. | 1321732 |
Official name | Flitwick Manor Park and Garden |
Designated | 1 July 1989 |
Reference no. | 1000383 |
Flitwick Manor is a Georgian country house in the south of Flitwick, Bedfordshire, England. It is located on Church Road off the A5120 road. Now operating as a hotel, the manor is a Grade II* listed building. Now owned by Flitwick Town Council, much of the Grade II Register of Historic Parks and Gardens listed park is accessible to the public.
History
[edit]Edward Blofield built Flitwick Manor in 1632.[1] He died in 1663 and left the property to his wife Jane.[2] In 1668 she married Samuel Rhodes and the property passed through the Rhodes family until it was bequeathed in 1736 by Benjamin Rhodes to Humphry Dell who was a relative.[3] Humphry Dell (1706–1764) was a physician who practised in Flitwick. He was a friend of Jeffrey Fisher and acted as godfather to his daughter Anne who was born in 1757. When Dell died in 1764 he left Flitwick Manor to Anne Fisher, his goddaughter, but as she was only seven years old her father Jeffrey Fisher was the proprietor until she turned twenty-one. An engraving of Flitwick Manor was made during this time in 1776. Anne married James Hesse of Edmonton in 1778 but he died in 1783 and in 1789 she married George Brooks (1741–1817). The manor then came into the possession of the Brooks family where it remained for the next 145 years.
Brooks family
[edit]George Brooks was a barrister and banker in London. After he married Anne he continued to live there and let Flitwick Manor to tenants. Robert Trevor was a very significant tenant as it was he who instigated the significant changes to the manor between 1793 and 1808. He agreed with George Brooks to pay half of the costs.[4] In 1816 George's son John Thomas Brooks (1794–1858) was given Flitwick Manor on his marriage to Mary Hatfield. This couple lived there for the rest of their lives, and made extensive improvements. The grounds were praised by the landscape architect John Claudius Loudon in the 1820s and 1830s, especially the arboretum, planted in a "natural arrangement".[5]
John Thomas Brooks wrote several diaries which give a picture of life at Flitwick Manor. The most important event in these diaries seems to be the death of his only daughter, Mary Ann Brooks (1822–1848), who died aged 26, in 1848. He was particularly fond of his garden and made major improvements to the grounds.[6] When he died in 1858, his eldest son John Hatfield Brooks (1824–1907) inherited the manor.
Major John Hatfield Brooks was educated in Rugby, Warwickshire and later became an officer in the 1st Bengal Light Cavalry. He served over in British India. It was in Calcutta that he married Sophia Margaret Cloete in 1850. The couple had two daughters. When John died in 1907, his eldest daughter Catherine Mary Frances Brooks (1853–1934) inherited the house.[7] Catherine did not marry and lived in the house until she died at the age of 81 in 1934. Her obituary outlined her work in the village of Flitwick and praised her generosity. When she died she had no heirs so she left the property to her cousin Robert Adolphus Lyall (1876–1948).[8] When he died in 1948 it was left to John Comyn Lyall. He advertised it for sale in 1953.
Later history
[edit]After being advertised for sale, Flitwick Manor was bought by Anthony Gilkison, a film director, who lived there until the early 1970s, when it was purchased by The Saxby Family.[9] The manor stayed in private hands until 1984, when it was converted to a restaurant. This was sold in 1990 and the manor is now a hotel, operated by Best Western.[10] In 2009, the main park including the arboretum and two adjoining fields to the south of the property were acquired by Flitwick Town Council to preserve it for the community. Access to the public is available during daylight hours. Disabled parking is available at the main entrance to the park on the corner of Dunstable Road and Church Road [11]
Reputed haunting
[edit]Flitwick Manor is reputedly haunted, and these stories have sometimes been used for publicity since it became a hotel.[12][13][14][15][16] The manor was featured in the episode "The Jim Twins/Flitwick Ghost" of the television series Strange but True? in 1995.[13][17]
Architecture
[edit]The main part of the existing house is the entrance block which dates from the early 18th century. It is two-storeys and is built of red brick. This block encases the earlier 17th century house and has a mansard roof below a parapet.[18] The architectural style is Georgian, in contrast to the garden frontage which is later and was undertaken in a Gothic Revival style. Charles O'Brien, in his 2014 revised Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough, in the Pevsner Buildings of England, series, identifies earlier work from the late 17th century and later, 19th and 20th century, extensions.[19] Historic England dates the 20th century work to 1936 and ascribes it to Sir Albert Richardson.[a] Flitwick Manor is a Grade II* listed building.[21] The pleasure gardens surrounding the house were laid out by George and John Thomas Brooks in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.[19] They were much admired by contemporaries, including Loudon. Much is now lost under 20th century housing developments. The park is listed Grade II on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.[1] A grotto in the grounds is listed Grade II.[b][22]
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Albert Richardson was a noted neoclassical architect and a founder of the Georgian Group. He lived in Bedfordshire for the latter part of his life, in a Georgian townhouse in Ampthill where he refused to install electricity on the grounds that living in the Georgian style enabled him to better understand Georgian architecture.[20]
- ^ The grotto mirrors the mixed architectural styles of the house in that its west frontage is Gothic while the east front is Neoclassical.[22]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Historic England. "Flitwick Manor Park and Garden (1000383)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ Blaydes 1890, p. 394.
- ^ "Flitwick Estate of the Brooks family". Bedfordshire Council archive service. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "Case studies of some estate gardens in Bedfordshire" (PDF). Bedfordshire County Archives. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
- ^ Loudon 1838, p. 2672.
- ^ Thompson 2007, pp. 132–133.
- ^ Bedfordshire Times and Independent – Friday 26 October 1934, p. 9.
- ^ Bedfordshire Times and Independent Bedfordshire, England 25 January 1935
- ^ British Phone Books.[better source needed]
- ^ "Flitwick Manor". Best Western. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "Manor Park". Flitwick Town Council. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
- ^ Puttick 1996, pp. 9–16.
- ^ a b O'Dell 2008, p. ?.
- ^ Wiltshire 1973, p. 3.
- ^ Hale, Rick (19 June 2019). "Guide To Haunted Flitwick Manor, Over A Century Of Ghostly Scares". Retrieved 5 January 2022.
- ^ "Flitwick Manor Hotel, Bedfordshire". Haunted Rooms®.
- ^ Adams & Brazil 2013, p. 104.
- ^ Historic England. "Flitwick Manor (Grade II*) (1137690)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
- ^ a b O'Brien & Pevsner 2014, p. 173.
- ^ Stamp, Gavin (18 September 2013). "Rejected riches: Avenue House". Apollo Magazine.
- ^ Historic England. "Flitwick Manor (Grade II*) (1137690)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ a b Historic England. "Grotto 50m west of Flitwick Manor (Grade II) (1321732)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
Sources
[edit]- Adams, Paul; Brazil, Eddie (2013). Extreme Hauntings: Britain's Most Terrifying Ghosts. History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-8956-8.
- Blaydes, Frederick Augustus (1890). Genealogia Bedfordiensis: Being a Collection of Evidences relating chiefly to the Land Gentry of Bedfordshire. London: The Chiswick Press. OCLC 865600360.
- Loudon, John Claudius (1838). Arboretum et fruticetum britannicum; or, the trees and shrubs of Britain, native and foreign, hardy and half-hardy, pictorially and botanically delineated, and scientifically and popularly described. OCLC 270646614.
- O'Brien, Charles; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014) [1968]. Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough. Buildings of England. New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-20821-4. OCLC 1276650843.
- O'Dell, Damien (2008). Paranormal Bedfordshire: True Ghost Stories. Stroud: Amberley. ISBN 978-1-445-62992-6.
- Puttick, Betty (1996). Ghosts of Bedfordshire. Newbury: Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1-853-06386-2.
- Thompson, Francis (2007). English Landed Society in the Nineteenth Century. New York & London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-41285-8.
- Wiltshire, Kathleen (1973). Ghosts and legends of the Wiltshire countryside. Salisbury: Compton Russell Ltd. ISBN 978-0-859-55007-9.
External links
[edit]- Flitwick
- Houses completed in 1816
- Hotels in Bedfordshire
- Country houses in Bedfordshire
- Grade II* listed buildings in Bedfordshire
- Georgian architecture in England
- Manor houses in England
- 1816 establishments in England
- Grade II* listed houses
- Country house hotels
- Reportedly haunted locations in the East of England