This page has been created to
post periodic articles about the continuing place-name research in to the Welsh
uplands that Aled Willams and I are conducting.
This research started over seven years ago and is ongoing.
Visiting
Grimsthorpe Castle
Seventy-four years ago the
final brush strokes were being added to a portrait of a six year old girl. Once finished, the portrait was framed and in
time hung on a wall, the penultimate portrait of many, all neatly arranged on opposite
walls of a long corridor. Many of the
other portraits comprised images of formal sittings, oil on canvass
predominated, with an artist’s skill the many faces of aristocracy were forever
captured, one beside another, all either ancestors of the six year old girl, or
monarchs of the day whose association was direct to her family.
The young girl was born Nancy
Jane Marie Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, she is the 28th Baroness
Willoughby de Eresby and is a joint hereditary Lord Great Chamberlain and sat
in the House of Lords as a crossbencher.
When in company she is referred to as Lady Jane or Lady Willoughby. Upon the death of her father in 1983 the
Earldom of Ancaster became extinct and she inherited 75,000 acres of land in
Lincolnshire and Perthshire, the former includes the stately house of
Grimsthorpe Castle and its grounds, whilst the latter comprises Drummond Castle
and its acreage. Both Castles are
periodically resided in by Lady Willoughby.
Grimsthorpe Castle is placed in
a 3,000 acre park comprising lakes, woodland, pastures and ornamental and
working garden, some of which was designed by Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown and
implemented by his patron; the 3rd Duke of Ancaster. In the true sense of the word the building is
not a castle as castellated architecture was later added which bestowed its
current title. The building is more a
stately home, grand in nature and has been the home of the de Eresby family
since 1516.
As well as the grandeur of
Grimsthorpe and Drummond Castles the family also own lands in north Wales, this
is the Gwydir Estate. The de Eresby
lands in north Wales were centred on Gwydir Castle (this building is no longer
owned by the family and is now a private residence) and is situated just to the
west of Llanrwst and just south of Trefriw in the Conwy valley on the edge of
Snowdonia. The building is an example of
a fortified manor house or courtyard house built in the traditional Tudor
architecture. Gwydir became the
ancestral home of the Wynn family who were descended from the Kings of Gwynedd,
and became one of the largest landowning families in north Wales and are
related to the de Eresby family through marriage.
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Drummond Castle © Copyright Doctor Richard Murray and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence |
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Gwydir Castle is a fine example of a fortified manor house built in traditional Tudor architecture |
During the 16th and
17th centuries when the Wynn family managed the Gwydir Estate the
house stood in a deer park comprising 36,000 acres. In 1678 the Estate was passed to the Barons
Willoughby de Eresby, who were based in Lincolnshire, and then from 1892 to the
Earls of Ancaster. Part of the Estate
comprised lands in the Parishes of Dolwyddelan, Llanrhychwyn and Llanrwst. Much of this land was mountainous, with lower
ffridd pasture usually bounded to
tenant farms and higher, open mynydd
land considered poor quality for grazing.
This higher mynydd land
comprised the ancient cynefin, or
sheep-walk in English, this is the land granted to tenant farms on the basis of
grazing rights, which are established through boundary fences, walls or
watersheds. Each patch of land, be it
fields, ffridd or mynydd is given a name, and sometimes
the names to ffridd and mynydd lands relate to the tenant farms, for example,
if the farm of Bryn Coch had grazing rights on bounded mountain land, the patch
of land (cynefin) would be known as
Mynydd Bryn Coch. This naming by
association to farm name is an ancient practice in Wales, and one that is still
used today.
In the 18th and 19th
century the Gwydir Estate and Castle suffered some years of neglect and went in
to a long decline. This was partly based
on income, or lack of, from the 30 slate mines on the land, this slate was of
poor quality and output was not high, this culminated in 1894 with the sale of
the Dolwyddelan lands, followed in the next two years by most of the Estate
lands of Llanrhychwyn and Trefriw. In
the early part of the 20th century the 1640s panelled main dining
room was totally stripped and in 1922 the Solar Tower was gutted by fire. In 1921 the Earl of Carrington sold the
house, this was the first time in over 400 years that it had been passed out of
inherited ownership. The current private
owners have rejuvenated Gwydir Castle and have restored the original 1640s
panels in the main dining room and are undergoing a programme of conservation.
It was inherent for many
Estates to document their land, tenants and rents, this usually took the form
of an Estate Survey, each detail would be meticulously catalogued in an Estate
Survey Book, and usually leather bound these books would form a document of the
day and in time become a priceless tool for research. Many Estate Survey Books are housed in
archive centres where access to their treasures is open to the public; others
are held in the private archive of the Estate.
Usually within their parched pages are many maps showing the fields, ffridd and mynydd lands of each tenant farm.
Lines across the map would indicate boundaries and letters within the
boundary could be cross referenced to an adjacent page where detail of farm,
residents and rents were sometimes documented.
Many Estate Survey Books were produced in the late 1790s, before the
Ordnance Survey was established as the map makers of the day, and because of
this they are a historical document of a bygone time. However, their importance is not to be
undervalued as they form a bridge between the late 1790s through the early
publicly available maps produced by the Ordnance Survey to nowadays when
research can be conducted via local
inquiries and the Internet. Occasionally
accessing these old Estate Survey Maps can confirm a name previously given
through local inquiry or one that has never been documented on any Ordnance
Survey map. As well as being a conduit
between times after Edward Llwyd and those of the Internet, these old books are
a literal work of art, with many maps being composed in watercolour paint,
intricate detail of lake, field boundary and parish with different colour used
to signify different boundaries; they are a joy to behold. It was our continuing research in to Welsh
upland place names that led Aled and I to the private archive of Lady
Willoughby at Grimsthorpe Castle.
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An excerpt from the Estate Survey book naming tenant farms and giving their respective rents |
This enquiry had originated
from research that Aled had conducted at the Caernarfon Archive Centre. Some of his visits to this archive were based
on research concerning the lands of the Gwydir Estate. Through research via the Internet he found a reference to an Estate Survey document
whose reference number comprised the initials ‘ANC’, this refers to the Earldom
of Ancaster, the now extinct title inherited by the male line of the de Esesby
family. Aled found that this document
was housed at the Lincolnshire Archive; he asked if I could make enquiry to its
whereabouts and arrange for it to be viewed by us. Thus began the journey we
were about to undertake….
I phoned the
Lincolnshire Archives and was told that the document had been there since the
1970s, but had been taken back in to the private archive of Lady Willoughby at
Grimsthorpe Castle in 1991. They kindly
gave me a forwarding contact at the Castle’s Estate Office. I initially spoke to someone called Helen who
explained that the Castle was busy in preparation to welcome the BBC’s Bargain
Hunt team for filming over the upcoming weekend and asked if I could call back
a few days later and speak to Ray Biggs.
When I contacted Ray he proved very helpful and suggested I should put
my request in writing and send the letter to Lady Willoughby, as she usually
takes an interest in such enquiries. I
thanked Ray and left him my contact details and the reference number that Aled
had found for the document. Later that
same day I received an email that informed me that Lady Willoughby had found
the document (book) and had invited us to visit Grimsthorpe Castle to view
it. I forwarded the email to Aled and
our levels of expectation and excitement started to spiral out of control! Soon afterwards I received a phone call,
“hello” I answered as I picked the receiver up, “hello it’s Jane
Willoughby” the voice on the other end gently announced. We talked for ten minutes or so with Lady
Willoughby describing the contents of the Estate Survey Book and inviting us
both to lunch, I thanked her for finding the book and also for inviting us to
visit.
Aled and I left Welshpool at
6.30am in early morning sunshine and arrived in the fertile lands of
Lincolnshire at around 9.30am. Our first
view of Grimsthorpe Castle was from its main entrance gate, with a straight
drive stretching out toward a resplendent symmetrical stately house with
manicured lawns either side of the drive. The view was made to impress and we
were not disappointed.
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The resplendent Grimsthorpe Castle |
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The opposing view looking down the main drive |
We drove to a side
entrance and introduced ourselves at the Estate Office, where they were
expecting us. We then bade our good mornings
at the security gate and were directed toward the Castle. With blue skies and summer warmth the whole
place had a feeling of a lazy day in the surrounds of a French country Château. Once the car was parked we walked past
ornamental landscaped gardens to the side of the Castle and rung a
doorbell. Soon we had been greeted and
were in a side room where the Estate Survey Book had been laid on a table. We introduced ourselves to Lady Willoughby
who proved a delight to converse with. Soon
afterwards Lady Willoughby excused herself and left us to our work. The Estate Survey book is entitled ‘Book of
Maps no 86’ and takes in the lands to the Gwydir Estate. Each map is a small work of art in its own
right with detail giving each land boundary highlighted in water colour. The majority of maps are to the lowlands, and
although all were of interest we wanted to examine two or three specific areas
to the mountains of the south-eastern Carneddau and areas around the
Moelwynion. The first had proved extremely
interesting from local place-name inquiries, whilst the latter was proving
problematic for a particular set of closely grouped hills.
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Aled with Lady Willoughby looking through documents relating to the Gwydir estate |
Each page within the
book was slowly opened to show another page of neatly written detail with an
accompanying map, many of these were folded as they were larger than the
dimensions of the book. Lakes were edged
in blue with pinks, yellows and greens used to edge and signify boundaries,
trees as green symbols, almost heart shaped in appearance with an underlying
green, mountains as pencilled hummocks, many stretching the length of a
boundary. All had been skilfully crafted
and meticulously drawn. This book is
over 215 years old and its contents a prized opportunity for those interested
in place-name research. During our
prolonged map gazing the security man asked us if we would like to be shown
around the Castle on one of the conducted tours, we thanked him and said yes,
he booked us in for 3.00pm.
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An excerpt from the Estate Survey book showing some of the lowlands in the Gwydir estate
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An excerpt from the Estate Survey book showing one of the fold-out pages |
By the time we had
digested the book’s contents it was time for lunch. We were led to a large rectangular room where
a long table had been set for five people.
Lady Willoughby soon arrived and sat at head of table, whilst opposite
Aled and I sat two furniture repairers who were working on chairs during the
week. Conversation flowed and centred on
our research, the history of the house and the region it was built in, as well
as that of Drummond Castle. The first
course consisted of artichoke harvested at the Scottish Estate with accompanying
hollandaise sauce, the main course was ushered in after a ringing of a bell
signified that plates could be collected, once a tasty fish cake, peas and
beans and new potatoes had been finished we had dessert which consisted of
fresh raspberries from the working garden and cream. After coffee we thanked our host and walked
back to the room where the Estate Survey Book remained firmly placed on its
table.
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Cross referencing detail from the old Gwydir Estate Survey book with a current Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 map
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As 3.00pm approached we
were led around the side of the Castle and introduced to the guide who would
take us and another four people around the part of the house that is open to
the public. It was fascinating to have
been in the company of Lady Willoughby and see the behind the scenes running of
the house and be in contact with its occupants and then join a guided tour,
full of history and anecdote whilst being led from one ornate room to another
with a plethora of priceless artefact and painting, all grandly displayed. I wondered what the emotional impact must
have been through the economical realisation that a house, however grand, that
had been in a family’s possession for so many centuries would have to be made
accessible to the public for its financial upkeep to carry on. This was not something I raised on the day
but the question partly intrigues me.
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Vanbrugh's north front showing symmetry of design |
We were shown the
Vanbrugh Hall, the State Dining Room, the King James Room, the State Drawing
Room, the South and west Corridor, the Gothic and Tapestry Bedrooms and the
Chapel. As we neared the end of the tour
we were led down another long corridor with bedrooms to our left where Prince
Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall had recently stayed, both walls were
awash with skilfully crafted portraits, many of Kings and Queens and titled
ancestors. I looked up at the
penultimate portrait, that of a young girl, a very different style from all
those preceding it. From memory the
girl’s eyes were looking slightly downward in a shy manner, even then her face
portrayed a beauty that would remain with her until later years. As the tour ended we thanked our guide and
headed back in to the private quarters of Lady Willoughby and spent 30 minutes
in the inner courtyard, taking photographs as the sun broke through the
afternoon’s cloud.
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The inner courtyard at Grimsthorpe Castle |
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We spent a relaxing 30 minutes in the inner courtyard before visiting the ornamental gardens |
After this we headed
outside to spend time walking around and photographing the front and rear of
the Castle, taking time to look out over the pool and park land that stretched
westward toward the horizon. Before
going back in to the Castle we roamed around the gardens admiring the beauty of
symmetrical pattern and watching a mouse as it positioned itself up a raspberry
vine to nibble away at its contents. After ringing the doorbell to gain access
back in to the Castle we were invited to join Lady Willoughby in the Library to
partake in afternoon tea. We were again
joined by the two furniture repairers, whose names I unfortunately did not
note. Tea was poured, conversation was
had and everyone seemed to enjoy the buttered Welsh cakes we had brought Lady
Willoughby, along with a baked Bara Brith, which was a small gift on our part
for the kindness she had shown by inviting us in to her home.
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Much of the irregular south front is due to extensive alteration carried out in later centuries |
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Part of the ornamental gardens at Grimsthorpe Castle |
We left at 5.50pm refreshed in
the knowledge that kindness is a part of the human spirit and gratitude
expressed can take many forms, ours was partly through our small gift. The opportunity to view such a document as the
Estate Survey Book and to do so in the surrounds of Grimsthorpe Castle in the
company of Lady Willoughby is an experience that will no doubt live with us for
many years to come.
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