Trentham Gardens

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Trentham Gardens are formal Italianate gardens, and an English landscape park in Trentham, Staffordshire on the southern fringes of the city of Stoke-on-Trent, England. The house was demolished in 1911 by its owner the 4th Duke of Sutherland, but the gardens and the park with its lake and woodlands have been preserved.

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[edit] The Gardens and Park

Trentham Lake
Trentham Lake

The gardens and park at Trentham currently cover some 300 acres (1.2 km²). The landscape architecture was designed as a serpentine park by Capability Brown and Henry Holland from 1758 onwards, overlying an earlier formal design attributed to Charles Bridgeman. However, in the twentieth century Trentham Gardens was principally known for the surviving formal gardens laid out in the 1840s by Sir Charles Barry, who also created Italianate gardens at Harewood House and Cliveden.

Italian Garden
Italian Garden

The gardens were the site of the Trentham Ballroom, which opened in 1931 and closed in 2002. A host of dance, rock and pop bands performed at Trentham Ballroom, including The Who. The Ballroom also hosted degree ceremonies for North Staffordshire Polytechnic

Barabary Macaque at Trentham Monkey Forest
Barabary Macaque at Trentham Monkey Forest

The Trentham estate is undergoing a major £120-million ($200m) redevelopment by St Modwen Properties plc as a leisure destination called "The Trentham Estate".

The project at Trentham includes restoration of the Italian Gardens and woodlands, and creation of a garden centre. The aim is to avoid noisy theme park-like attractions, and instead to offer "authentic experiences" to older people and younger children. Recently a monkey forest, the first of its kind in England, has opened. Visitors can roam through the park where 140 Barbary Macaque monkeys wander free in the woodlands. There are no fences in place to stop the monkeys from interacting with the visitors.

[edit] Trentham Hall

Trentham Hall in the 1820s, before the 19th century expansion.
Trentham Hall in the 1820s, before the 19th century expansion.

As for the former days of Trentham Hall, William White wrote 1851: "Trentham Hall is the principal residence of the Most Noble George Granville Leveson Gower, Duke of Sutherland, Marquess of Stafford, Earl Gower, Viscount Trentham, and Hereditary Sheriff of Sutherland. It is an elegant mansion, situated near the village in a park of 500 acres (2 km²). It has been entirely rebuilt during the last 14 years, and now has an elegant stone front and a lofty square tower. The late hall was erected about 120 years ago, after the model of Buckingham House, in St. James's Park, but it was considerably altered and improved by the first Marquess of Stafford, from designs by Henry Holland, who gave a new and imposing feature to the whole. The present mansion is on a larger and more magnificent plan and the gardens rank amongst the finest in England." (History, Gazetteer and Directory of Staffordshire, Sheffield, 1851). The remodelling was also the work of Sir Charles Barry.

There are plans to rebuild Trentham Hall as a five star hotel.

Trentham Hall in 1880 from Morris's Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen.  The front entrance is at the left, leading into the three storey main house. The two storey family wing is at the right, beyond the campanile.
Trentham Hall in 1880 from Morris's Seats of Noblemen and Gentlemen. The front entrance is at the left, leading into the three storey main house. The two storey family wing is at the right, beyond the campanile.

[edit] Further reading

  • The Beauty of Trentham: an account of the topography & history of Trentham Gardens, with an intimate tour of Trentham Hall & its art; 1887. Burslem Books, 2004.

[edit] External links