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Copped Hall

Coordinates: 51°41′37″N 0°04′04″E / 51.69361°N 0.06778°E / 51.69361; 0.06778
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Copped Hall
Centre of east front
Copped Hall is located in Essex
Copped Hall
Location within Essex
Established1995; 29 years ago (1995) (purchase by a trust and opened to the public)
LocationEpping, Essex
Essex
United Kingdom
TypeGeneral interest museum.
Restoration of historic building.
CollectionsGeorgian
ChairpersonAlan Cox
OwnerThe Copped Hall Trust
Public transit accessLondon Underground Epping +40 minute walk
Nearest car parkOn site
WebsiteOfficial website
Copped Hall
Built1751; 273 years ago (1751)
Original useHouse
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated1984
Reference no.1337306
Copped Hall west front

Copped Hall, also known as Copt Hall or Copthall, is a mid-18th-century English country house close to Waltham Abbey, Essex, which has been undergoing restoration since 1999. Today, Copped Hall refers to the upstanding house, while Copt Hall or Copthall refer to the older Tudor and earlier houses. Copped Hall is visible from the M25 motorway between junctions 26 and 27.

There was a separate Copped Hall (or Coppeed Hall) in Totteridge, which is not to be confused with this building.

History

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Foundation

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King Richard I bestowed the lands on Richard Fitz Aucher to hold them in fee, and hereditarily of the Abbey.[1] During the reign of Edward I Copthall continued in the possession of the Fitz Aucher family[2] till it came into the hands of the Abbot until the Dissolution of the Monasteries by King Henry VIII.

Heyday

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In the early 19th century

Sir Thomas Heneage received the estate of Copthall on 13 August 1564 from Queen Elizabeth I, where he subsequently built an elaborate mansion. The Queen was a frequent visitor to Essex and she is recorded as having visited Heneage at Copthall in 1575.[3] His daughter, afterwards Countess of Winchelsea, sold it to the Earl of Middlesex in the reign of James I. From him it passed to Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset, who sold it in 1701 to Sir Thomas Webster, Bt.

Edward Conyers purchased the estate in 1739, but he only owned the house for three years before dying in 1742. Conyers' son John (1717-1775) inherited the property and considered repairing the original Hall as it had become dilapidated. However, in the end he decided to build a new house on a different site. This was built between 1751 and 1758 after demolishing the old one around 1748.

The Georgian house, a large structure set in landscaped parkland, "has long been celebrated as one of the principal ornament of the country".[4]: 26  The gardens of the main house have a ha-ha (a disguised ditch), which allows animals to approach yet prevents them from entering. It was a good example of the '18th-century house in landscape'. The mansion was placed overlooking two valleys with a third valley to the north. The building was well proportioned, with the chimneys built in a tight geometric arrangement.

The next member of the family to inherit Copped Hall was his son John Conyers (1748-1818), who extensively altered the house.

Decline

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In the 1880s

His son, Henry John Conyers (1782–1853), was said[by whom?] to be so obsessed with hunting that he neglected the house. He was survived by three daughters. The house was finally sold by the family in 1869. It was bought by George Wythes (1811-1883), who had made his fortune in civil engineering, building railways around the world.

Country Life magazine ran two articles on Copped Hall in 1910, illustrated with many photographs.

The main house was gutted in an accidental fire one Sunday morning in 1917 which was caused by an electrical fault.

The Wythes family, who were the then occupiers, moved into Wood House on the estate. Ernest Wythes died in 1949 and his wife died in 1951. Around 1950 the estate was sold, after which followed a period of total neglect, see Destruction of country houses in 20th-century Britain. The main 18th-century house was first stripped of its more desirable building materials then left to deteriorate. The orangery was blown up as an army training exercise in the 1960s. All the statues in the gardens were sold and removed to other large estate houses; some ended up in Anglesey Abbey in Cambridgeshire. Nineteen stone obelisks were purchased by the renowned diarist Sir Henry ‘Chips’ Channon and moved to Kelvedon Hall near, Brentwood, Essex.[5] A gazebo from the garden was set up in the grounds of St Paul's Walden Bury.

In 1995, the derelict shell of the main house was used as a location for the music video for I Can't Be with You by The Cranberries.[6]

Restoration

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In 1995 the Copped Hall Trust acquired the freehold of the house, ancillary buildings and gardens, all of which they are slowly restoring. The house can be visited on certain days, with progress being made to replicate its Georgian décor. The surrounding parkland is now owned by the Conservators of Epping Forest, the City of London.

On 27 April 2004 Charles, Prince of Wales, accompanied by the Lord Lieutenant of Essex, Lord Petre, visited Copped Hall and inspected the restoration work. The Prince opened an exhibition of 18th-century botanical water-colours in the new temporary gallery. These water-colours were painted by Matilda Conyers, the daughter of John Conyers, who built Copped Hall.

The West Essex Archaeology Group (WEAG) hold annual excavations at a site in the Copped Hall grounds.[7] These largely focus on the earthwork remains of the Tudor house, which predates the standing Georgian house. The digs comprise archaeology weekends for those with little experience, and a five-day field school for the more experienced.

Wood House

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Wood House is a 19th-century home on the Copped Hall estate, built in 1895 by Ernest James Wythes. He moved here from the main Copped Hall house when much of the Palladian mansion was destroyed by fire in 1917 and during its rebuilding, though subsequently remaining at Wood House. Singer Rod Stewart lived in the property for a number of years before selling it in March 2019 for just over £4 million.[8][9]

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References

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  1. ^ The Journey from Chester to London by Thomas Pennant - 1811
  2. ^ The History of Essex, From the Earliest Period to the Present Time by Elizabeth Ogborne - 1817
  3. ^ An Elizabethan Progress: The Queen's Journey to East Anglia, 1578 by Zillah M. Dovey
  4. ^ Cromwell, Thomas (1819). Excursions in the County of Essex. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown.
  5. ^ Channon, Chips (8 September 2022). Henry 'Chips' Channon: The Diaries (Volume 3): 1943-57. Random House. ISBN 978-1-5291-5174-9.
  6. ^ "The Cranberries - I Can't Be With You (Official Music Video)". Archived from the original on 18 December 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
  7. ^ "Research". www.weag.org.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  8. ^ "Search Results". landregistry.data.gov.uk. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  9. ^ Wathen, Tommy (28 October 2018). "Inside Rod Stewart's former Essex mansion being sold for almost £5 million". EssexLive. Retrieved 31 December 2021.

Further reading

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Books
  • Brimble, James A. St. Thomas's Quarters. In: London's Epping Forest. London. Country Life, 1950. Chapter 10.
  • Cassidy, R. Copped Hall: a Short History. Waltham Abbey Historical Society, 2001.
  • Farmer, M.J. The history of the ancient Town and once famous Abbey of Waltham. London. 1735.
  • Newman, J. Copthall, Essex. In: H. Colvin and J. Harris (eds) The Country Seat. Studies in the history of the British country house presented to Sir John Summerson. London. Penguin, Press, 1970. 18–29.
Reports (by year)
  • West Essex Archaeological Group. An archaeological evaluation carried out at Copped Hall by West Essex Archaeological Group in 2002. West Essex Archaeological Group, 2003.
  • Holloway, C. Archaeological excavation at Copped Hall, Essex, in 2003. Copped Hall Trust Archaeological Project, 2005.
  • Holloway, C. Archaeological excavation at Copped Hall, Essex, 2004-5. Copped Hall Trust Archaeological Project, 2007.
  • West Essex Archaeological Group. Archaeology at Copped Hall 2002-2009. West Essex Archaeological Group. Accessed 5 April 2012
  • Madeley, Andrew & Holloway, Christina (West Essex Archaeological Group). The 2010 season at Copped Hall. West Essex Archaeological Group. Accessed 5 April 2012
Articles
  • Andrews, D. (1986). "Old Copped Hall: The Site of the Tudor Mansion". Essex Archaeology and History (17): 96–106.
  • Andrews, D. (1998). "Epping, Copped Hall. Observations and discoveries 1996-97". Essex Archaeology and History (29): 226–228.
  • "The Grand Estate of Epping". West Essex Life: 12–13. December 2006.
  • "Copped Hall. Excavating an Elizabethan building boom". Current Archaeology. 19, No.2 (218): 36–43. May 2008.
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51°41′37″N 0°04′04″E / 51.69361°N 0.06778°E / 51.69361; 0.06778