WEDDINGTON CASTLE - An Online History
Other Halls and Castles Around Nuneaton - Arbury Hall
Click on thumbnail for larger image. Scroll
down for more images and the history of this building.
More images of Arbury Hall can be viewed by clicking
here.
|
|
|
Arbury Hall - the finest remaining Hall in Nuneaton
|
|
|
|
|
Arbury Hall - colour postcard 1908
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Arbury Hall, as featured in the Graphic Ilustrated in 1881
|
|
|
|
Arbury postcard, dated 1910
|
|
|
|
Arbury Hall, Nuneaton, showing the gothic south front. 1960s*
|
|
|
|
Arbury Hall, the entrance on the east front. 1960s*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Arbury Hall with view of the lake. 1900s*
|
|
|
|
Arbury Hall, Nuneaton. 1905*
|
|
|
|
The main entrance to Arbury Hall. 1950s*
|
|
|
|
A man with a shotgun outside The Bath House, Arbury Hall. 1905*
|
|
|
|
Furniture and furnishings in the drawing room at Arbury Hall, near Nuneaton. 1900s*
|
|
|
|
A lodge to Arbury Hall. Opposite Astley Pool. 1952*
|
|
|
|
|
The stables at Arbury Hall. 1960s*
|
|
|
|
The stables at Arbury Hall, from the south. 1950s*
|
|
|
|
Dining Room
|
|
|
|
Drawing Room
|
|
|
|
Saloon
|
|
|
|
Saloon
|
|
|
|
|
The Chapel
|
|
|
|
Mary Bagot, wife of Sir Richard Newdigate (by Sir Peter Lely)
|
|
|
|
Mr F.A.N. Newdigate of Arbury Hall, 1862-1936*
|
|
|
|
Round Towers, Arbury Hall. 1960s*
|
|
|
|
Arbury Priory. Early plan of the Stable Building
|
|
|
In the
14th century Harefield Place, near
Uxbridge was acquired through marriage by the Newdigate family. Harefield Place
remained the family's principal home until 1586 when John Newdigate exchanged
the house for Arbury Hall in Warwickshire.
Sir Richard Newdigate, the 1st Baronet, made a fortune at the bar and bought
back Harefield House. As a result, when Sir Roger Newdigate inherited the title
in 1734 he acquired both properties.
Sir Roger inherited the family baronetcy and estates whilst he was still a
school boy at Westminster. On leaving University College Oxford, Sir Roger made
a Grand Tour of France and Italy. After he returned to England he set about
establishing himself and in 1741 became a Tory Member of Parliament for
Middlesex.
Two years later he married Sophia Conyers. He spent three months each spring
attending the Houses of Parliament but the greater part of his life was spent on
the Arbury estate. In later years he became more and more reluctant to leave
Arbury Hall and became obsessed with the decoration of the house.
When Sir Roger inherited Arbury Hall it was quadrangular Elizabethan house
constructed on the site of an Augustinian monastery. His grandfather had added
the chapel with its rich plaster ceiling in the latter part of the 17th century.
In the late 1740s Sir Roger began to modernise the house. He worked around the
house room by room and by the time he has finished 50 years later very little,
apart from the chimney-piece in the long gallery, was left unaltered.
Sir Roger built in the Gothic style which had been fashionable in the ten years
before he began. He employed the architect Henry Keene who worked on Arbury Hall
from 1761 until his death in 1776. Some of the work at Arbury reflects Keene's
close association with Westminster Abbey, where he held two surveyorships during
this time. The chimney piece in drawing room is based on the tomb of Aymer de
Valence in the Abbey and the fan vaulting in the dining room is derived from
Henry VII's chapel.
In 1774 his wife died and two weeks later the broken-hearted Sir Roger left on a
18 month tour on the continent with two relations, Charles Parker and Mary
Conyers. He went sight-seeing in Paris, studied some of the great Gothic
cathedrals, including Rheims and Milan and brought back statues, casts and
paintings. Sir Roger returned to Arbury at the end of 1775.
Keene died the following year and was replaced by Henry Couchman, a Warwick
builder who set about completing the south front and began work on the saloon.
This is the finest room in the house and took 20 years to complete. The
bow-window with its intricate plaster tracery was installed in 1795.
In 1789 Sir Roger fell out with Couchman and he was dismissed. After that time
Sir Roger supervised the work at Arbury himself.
In 1776 Sir Roger married Hester Mundy, a Derbyshire woman. Sir Roger and Lady
Newdigate were childless but in the 1780s a young girl called Sally Shilton came
into their lives. Lady Newdigate had heard Sally, a daughter of a miner, singing
on a cottage doorstep. She was captivated by the girl's voice and took her to
live at Arbury Hall. Sally graduated from the housekeeper's room to eventually
share the lives of Sir Roger and Lady Newdigate.
Years later George Elliot, who was born and brought up on the Arbury estate used
the story of Sally Shilton, who later married the local clergyman, as the basis
of one of her 'Scenes of Clerical Life'. George Eliot (born Mary Ann Evans) was
a local authoress based in the Coventry and Nuneaton district, from 1819-1880.
George Eliot was born at South Farm, Arbury Hall estate on 22nd November 1819
the family moved four or five months later to Griff House on the outskirts of
the Arbury estate. Her father Robert Evans was the estate's manager.
When Sir Roger died in 1806 he had been master of Arbury for 72 years. Sir
Roger's successors have preserved Arbury Hall, which is regarded as the 'Gothic
Gem' of the Midlands, almost as he left it. The house contains a fine collection
of Chelsea and oriental porcelain, furniture by Chippendale and Hepplewhite and
paintings by such notable artists as Lely, Reynolds, Romney and Arthur Devis (who
painted Francis Vincent at Weddington Castle).
Arbury Hall is surrounded by beautiful parkland. The landscaped gardens have
wide expanses of lawn, lakes and winding woodland walks. There are profuse
spring flowers and in June colour is provided by rhododendrons, wisteria and
azaleas. The Hall and gardens are still owned by the Newdigate family and are
now open to the public.
Photos marked * are © Warwickshire County
Council, 2003


|