Tuesday, 31 May 2016

A mini-break in Worcestershire, Staffordshire & a bit of Shropshire - Bratch Locks, Wightwick and Boscobel

On the final day of our mini-break we visited Bratch Locks, Wightwick Manor (National Trust) and Boscobel House (English Heritage)


The Bratch Locks are a feature of the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal, near Wombourne.


They were planned by James Brindley, and opened in 1772 as a three lock staircase. 


They were later re-engineered as three separate locks. They are served by two bridges, a toll house, and a keeper's cottage.


Wightwick Manor (pronounced "Wittick") is a Victorian manor house located on Wightwick Bank, Wolverhampton. It was built by Theodore Mander; the Mander family were successful 19th-century industrialists in the area


The Manor was designed by Edward Ould of Liverpool in two phases; the first was completed in 1887 and the house was extended with the Great Parlour wing in 1893


The house has Victorian gardens and the outbuildings house stables, a handmade pottery shop, studio workshop and an antiquarian bookshop


This family house portrays life during the Victorian era and is an example of the influence of William Morris, with original Morris wallpapers and fabrics, De Morgan tiles, Kempe glass and Pre-Raphaelite works of art.


The house was presented to the National Trust by Sir Geoffrey Mander in 1937. Descendants of the family retain rooms in the manor


We also visited the extensive gardens



For more details of the history of the manor click Wightwick Manor

Our final visit before returning home was to Boscobel House - which is just over the county border in Shropshire.


Boscobel House is a Grade II listed building in the parish of Boscobel (which is just in Shropshire). It has been, at various times; a farmhouse, a hunting lodge, and a holiday home; but it is most famous for its role in the escape of Charles II after the Battle of Worcester in 1651. Today it is managed by English Heritage. Boscobel is believed to come from the Italian phrase bosco bello meaning "in the midst of fair woods": in 1632, Boscobel House was surrounded by dense woodlands


Boscobel House was created around 1632, when landowner John Giffard of White Ladies Priory converted a timber-framed farmhouse, built sometime in the 16th century on the lands of White Ladies Priory, into a hunting lodge. John Giffard decided to make the farmhouse more useful by building a substantial extension to the south, including a living room and bedrooms more fitted to use by a gentry family. Giffard called the new hunting lodge Boscobel House


The Giffard family were Recusants - Catholics who refused to participate in the worship of the established Church of England. For them, this brought fines, imprisonment and discrimination: for priests it could mean barbarous execution.

The house itself served as a secret place for the shelter of Catholic priests, with at least one priest-hole. By 1651, when Boscobel played host to Charles II, it was owned by John Giffard's heir, his daughter, Frances Cotton. It was here that Charles II hid in a tree to escape discovery by Parliamentary soldiers during his escape after the Battle of Worcester ...


... and this is reputedly a "descendant" of the oak tree where Charles II hid.

For more photos of the final day of our mini-break click Bratch, Wightwick, and Boscobel

An action-packed three days - we're now home ... resting!

A mini-break in Worcestershire, Staffordshire & a bit of Shropshire - Witley Court

On day two of our mini-break we visited the English Heritage site at Witley Court. 


Witley Court was once of the great country houses of England, reaching its peak in the Victorian period when it was the setting for extravagant parties and royal entertainments


It is now a Grade I listed building as well as being designated a National Monument. It is a spectacular ruin after being devastated by fire in 1937. It was built by Thomas Foley in 1655 on the site of a former manor house near Great Witley. Subsequent additions were designed by John Nash in the early 19th century and the Court was subsequently bought by the Earls of Dudley in 1837. 


The house and 40 acres were acquired in 2008 by a wealthy family for less than £0.9m, but remains in the guardianship of the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, and managed on their behalf by English Heritage since 1984


The two immense fountains have survived. They were designed by Nesfield and executed by James and William Forsyth, who were carrying out sculpture in the house and the church. 


The largest, the Perseus and Andromeda Fountain, has been restored to working order by English Heritage. It spouts forth (and upwards) on the hour for about 15 minutes.

For more details of the history of this property see Witley Court

After Witley Court we visited Bewdley, then Whitlenge Gardens, and Droitwich before travelling to our hotel on the west side of Wolverhampton. For some photos of these places click here Bewdley etc

... and for some more of Witley Court click here Witley Court

A mini-break in Worcestershire, Staffordshire & a bit of Shropshire - Worcester

We have just returned from a three day mini-break - our starting place was Worcester. Here are a few photos of our time in the city.



The Worcester Guildhall was originally built as a meeting place for Worcester merchants around 1227. The present building is a Queen Anne building, begun in 1722 by Thomas White, a pupil of Sir Christopher Wren.



The exterior of the Guildhall is brick, dressed with stone. White himself is said to have carved the figure of Queen Anne over the entry, as well as those of Charles I and II, a reminder of the city's long history of royal support




The ornate ceiling in the main chamber



View of the River Severn from the Cathedral



Worcester Cathedral, before the English Reformation known as Worcester Priory, is on a bank overlooking the River Severn. It was built between 1084 and 1504 and is famous for its Norman crypt and chapter house



The Cathedral contains the tomb of King John in its chancel. Before his death in Newark in 1216, John had requested to be buried at Worcester



Fort Royal Park - towards the end of the English Civil War, Charles II left Scotland on a journey to return to London. During the break in his journey at Worcester he looked for support from the people of the city.
 


Fort Royal was a redoubt on a small hill to the south-east of Worcester. It was built by the Royalists in 1651 and was one of sites of the Battle of Worcester, fought on 3 September 1651 - the last battle of the war and a Parliamentary victory. 

In early April 1786 it was also visited by John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, who went on to become the second and third Presidents of the United States of America. They were keen to see the site they regarded as the place where democracy was effectively born.



The Commandery is a Grade I listed building and has been used for many different purposes over the many years it has been around. These include: a Church, a house, a monastic hospital, hotel and in present day, a museum open to the public



When It opened as a museum in 1977 it was the only museum in England dedicated solely to the Civil War. The Commandery ceased to be a Civil War museum when it reopened to the public in May 2007 and now displays six different periods of history, focusing on the characters and stories that affected the Commandery at those times.



The periods covered are as follows:

- The Medieval period, when The Commandery is said to have been founded  It served as an almshouse as well as a place of hospitality for pilgrims and other travellers.

- The Tudor period, when following the suppression in 1540 The Commandery became the residence of the Wyldes, a family of clothiers who remained in possession of it until 1785.


- The Civil War, when The Commandery was used by Charles II's forces as headquarters during the Battle of Worcester.




- The Georgian period, when after its sale by Thomas Wylde in 1785 The Commandery was split into several family homes.

- The Victorian period, when The Commandery housed a pioneering school for the "blind sons of gentlemen".


- The 1950s, when The Commandery was used as a printing factory by the Littlebury family.


Greyfriars was built in 1480 by a wealthy merchant, it became a home to wealthy families up until the 17th century and in 1699 a baker purchased the lease and divided the house into two.  It became a mixture of homes, shops and businesses for next 200 years. 




Trade varied and included clothing, hats, bread, leather goods, umbrellas and china riveting.  Over the years buildings were added and extended including 10 cottages in the back yard.



But as the fortunes locally declined from the 1700s it was threatened with demolition in the 1930s along with the row of 10 houses in Georges Yard behind



This black and white timber-framed house was rescued from demolition after the Second World War and has been carefully restored and refurbished with a walled garden designed and created by the Matley-Moores recycling and using materials from the demolished cottages.  The Matley-Mooores were two siblings who remained Greyfriars tenants until their deaths 1980s. The care of Greyfriars was transferred to the National Trust in 1966



Worcester Racecourse has hosted horse racing since 1718. It staged Flat racing until 1966 but has since staged National Hunt racing only. The course is laid out as an oval circuit about 13 furlongs in length 



Our "home" for the night. Stanbrook Abbey was originally built as a contemplative house for Benedictine nuns. It was founded in 1625 in Cambrai, Flanders, then part of the Spanish Netherlands, under the auspices of the English Benedictine Congregation. After being deprived of their abbey during the French Revolution the surviving nuns fled to England and in 1838 settled in Stanbrook, Worcestershire, where a new abbey was built.




In 2002 the community had 28 professed nuns and two postulants; and some 120 lay people, known as oblates. The community moved to Crief Farm at Wass in the North York Moors National Park in 2009. In August 2010 the Worcestershire property was sold to Clarenco LLP and it is now an events venue for weddings, conferences and the like – as well as offering rooms to the likes of us!

For more photos of our time in the city click Worcester