Bulstrode Park

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Bulstrode courtyard arch & north tower‎
Bulstrode courtyard arch & north tower‎
Bulstrode grounds
Bulstrode grounds

Bulstrode Park is a large park to the northwest of the Buckinghamshire town of Gerrard's Cross in the English Home Counties. It dates back to before the Norman conquest.

The previous house was built in 1686 for the infamous Judge Jeffreys. It was sold to Hans William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland, who made it one of his principal residences and died there in 1709.

Bulstrode was used by Margaret Bentinck, the wife of the 2nd Duke to house her natural history and antiquities collection, with the south-west side of the park used for live specimens (called Menagerie Wood today). Their son, the 3rd Duke was a collector of marble and glass, and was influential in loaning the Roman Portland Vase to Joshua Wedgwood.

When the 4thDuke of Portland inherited the title in 1809 he disposed of Bulstrode. It then passed into the hands of the Dukes of Somerset, who descended from Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset the nephew of Jane Seymour.

The 12th Duke of Somerset, Edward Adolphus Seymour commissioned the present mansion, completed in 1865. After his death it passed to his daughter, Lady Helen Guendolen Ramsden and then to her son, Sir John Frecheville Ramsden, until he lost his fortune.

In 1932 the estate was sold. Outlying buildings were sold, but the house was unoccupied until World War II, when it was used for training by the WAAF Women's Auxiliary Air Force.

After the War, Sir John used part of the property for chemical research into sisal by-products, but the property fell into disrepair. After his death in 1958, the park was sold to a farmer, and the mansion and woodland were bought by the Bruderhof society of brothers, who supported themselves with light industry.

In 1966 the community moved to the USA, and the property was bought by WEC International, a Christian evangelical missionary agency, who continue to seek to restore the property and its gardens to their former glory.

The history of the house and a guide to the gardens are available in a recent publication called 'Bulstrode Guide' available from the house. It is open to the public every Bank Holiday Monday in early May.

Bulstrode, Oxford Road, Gerrards Cross, Bucks, SL9 8SZ, England.

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Coordinates: 51.58676° N 0.57966° W