Canons Ashby House

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Canon's Ashby house - from the rear garden
Canon's Ashby house - from the rear garden

Canons Ashby House is an Elizabethan manor house located in Canons Ashby, Daventry, Northamptonshire, England. It is mainly owned by the National Trust although "The Tower" is in the care of the Landmark Trust.

It has been the home of the Dryden family since its construction in the 16th century. The manor house was built in approximately 1550 with additions in the 1590s, in the 1630s and 1710; it has remained essentially unchanged since the 1710s.

John Dryden had married Elizabeth Cope in 1551 and inherited, through his wife, a L-shaped farmhouse which he gradually extended. In the 1590s his Son, Sir Erasmus Dryden completed the final North range of the house which enclosed the Pebble Courtyard.

The interior of the house is noted for its Elizabethan wall paintings and its Jacobean plasterwork.

The house sits in the midst of a formal garden with colourful herbaceous borders, an orchard featuring varieties of fruit trees from the 16th century, terraces, walls and gate piers from 1710. There is also the remains of a medieval priory church (from which the house gets its name).

Gervase Jackson-Stops, who was the Architectural Adviser to the National Trust for over twenty years, broke fresh ground when he fought for the rescue of the then decaying manor-house. This was the first time that the Trust used government funds rather than the traditional family endowment to save an historic house.

Louis Osman (1914-1996)

To the wider audience Louis Osman is perhaps known only as the goldsmith who made the coronet used at the investiture of the Prince of Wales in 1969. He lived at Canons Ashby House at the time he made the coronet.

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