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New Place, Shirrell Heath

Coordinates: 50°55′07″N 1°11′43″W / 50.9185°N 1.1953°W / 50.9185; -1.1953
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New Place
TypeCountry House
LocationShirrell Heath
Coordinates50°55′07″N 1°11′43″W / 50.9185°N 1.1953°W / 50.9185; -1.1953
AreaHampshire
Built1906
ArchitectEdwin Lutyens
Architectural style(s)Jacobethan
OwnerMokan Hotels
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameNew Place, Shirrell Heath
Designated3 February 1952
Reference no.1095660
New Place, Shirrell Heath is located in Hampshire
New Place, Shirrell Heath
Location of New Place in Hampshire

New Place, Shirrell Heath, Shedfield, Hampshire, England, is a former country house, now a hotel, designed by Edwin Lutyens. It is a Grade I listed building.

History

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The Sate Room, removed from the Bristol mansion. From Weaver (1913)

New Place was commissioned by Mrs A. S. Franklyn in 1904.[1] Resident in nearby Shedfield, Mrs Franklyn had inherited a large early 17th Century mansion, 12, Welsh Back, Bristol, which was scheduled for demolition.[2] Wanting a new home in which to incorporate elements salvaged from the Bristol house, and to commemorate her ancestral connections with William Shakespeare, in 1904 she commissioned Edwin Lutyens to design a new house, named after New Place in Stratford-upon-Avon.[1] The house was complete by 1906,[3] with the contract for completion signed in a week in May of that year when Lutyens finalised four contracts on the same day. He described his triumph in a letter to his wife, written while on a train to Devon: "Hemingway has signed contract for £17,500, Dolgorouki accepts £15,000, Birds £7800, Mrs Franklin (sic) £9300. So this week, signed and sealed, £34,600".[4] In 1908, Mrs Franklyn gave the house to her son, Henry Arden Franklyn, whose middle name recalled the family's Shakespearean connections through their descent from Shakespeare's mother, Mary Arden. In the 1950s, the house was sold and housed a prep school. Since the 1980s, it has operated as a hotel, under a number of managing companies.[1]

Architecture and description

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The house is built entirely of dark-red brick, from the brickworks at Danehill, Hampshire.[5] The central block is of two storeys, with three-story matching wings.[6] The style is Jacobethan and Lutyens originally intended that the E-plan house would have stepped gables, styled after Montacute House in Somerset, but these were not constructed.[5] The interior contains substantial fittings from Mrs Franklyn's Bristol mansion, including fireplaces, over mantels, doorcases, panelling and a staircase.[a][5] Lutyens admitted subsequently that he "did not much like the house",[5] which is now a Grade I listed building.[6]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ The door to the Bristol Room dates from 1623 and represents a very early use of mahogany in England.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "New Place history". New Place Hotel. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
  2. ^ Latham & Tipping 1907, pp. 303–305.
  3. ^ Amery, Richardson & Stamp 1981, p. 193.
  4. ^ Hussey 1989, p. 128.
  5. ^ a b c d e O'Brien et al. 2018, pp. 588–590.
  6. ^ a b Historic England. "New Place, Shirrell Heath (1095660)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 December 2019.

Sources

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Media related to New Place at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to 12, Welsh Back, Bristol at Wikimedia Commons