The Wodehouse

The Wodehouse (formerly also Woodhouse) is a grade II* listed country house near Wombourne, Staffordshire, notable as the seat of the Georgian landscape designer and musicologist Sir Samuel Hellier and, a century later, Colonel Thomas Bradney Shaw-Hellier, director of the Royal Military School of Music. For almost 200 years the family owned the Hellier Stradivarius. It is claimed that the Wodehouse has not been sold for over 900 years,[1] though more than once the family has died out.

House, garden, and estate

The south pool of the Wom Brook, in the grounds of the Wodehouse.

The Wodehouse is situated on the Wom Brook, to the east of the village, and the estate has existed since medieval times. The manor house itself was listed by English Heritage in 1953 as II*,[2] as were the stable block and coach house in 1963.[3] The early eighteenth century Wodehouse farmhouse and mill, across the road from the main house, were grade II* listed in 1973.[4] In 1987, the barn,[5] the dam over the mill pool,[6] and the causeway over its other end[7] all received grade II status.

In the middle of the 18th century, the Wodehouse was turned into a centre of culture. The 18 acres (73,000 m2) of grounds were laid out in fashionable style:

The Wodehouse [...] became in the later 18th century, an early Alton Towers, the resort both of ‘people of consequence’ and of ‘tag, rag and rabble’ for here, in 1763, Sir Samuel Hellier laid out a pleasure garden which, besides having all the usual decorative features of gardens of the time, temples, grottoes, a root house, a druid’s circle, also had a music room with working organ, a hermitage with life-sized model of a hermit and boards set up along the paths with appropriate verses to enlighten visitors. The whole garden was a clearly a caricature of the finest achievements in 18th-century gardening.[8]

Some of this, such as Handel's temple, was the first commission of James Gandon after leaving the studios of Sir William Chambers. A series of drawings of the garden features are all that survive.[9] The Shaw Helliers and some of their properties are mentioned in the 1820 Survey of Staffordshire, but, curiously, not the Wodehouse itself.[10] Samuel Lewis in the 1848 edition of A Topographical Dictionary of England describes the property as "a noble mansion in the Elizabethan style, situated in a beautiful vale".[11]

The house has a fourteenth century core, with seventeenth century additions and eighteenth century internal refittings. It was restored by George Frederick Bodley, the Gothic revival architect, in the 1870s. A generation later, in the late 1890s, Charles Robert Ashbee, a leader in the English Arts and Crafts Movement, made additions such as a billiard room and a chapel,[12] as well as many decorative external features.[13] In 1912, just after the estate changed hands, the Wolverhampton architect J.K.H.E. Lavender was engaged.[12] The gardens continued to be opened to the public on certain occasions; for example, in 1936 the Wodehouse joined the National Gardens Scheme, and as recently as in 2011 hosted the AGM of the Staffordshire Gardens and Parks Trust.[14]

In 1984, the Victoria County History volume for south-west Staffordshire called the Wodehouse one of the "three great houses" of the area, along with Enville Hall and Patshull Hall.[15] At the turn of the 21st century, Michael Raven describes the Wodehouse as "unspoilt", with the house having "a certain serene and mysterious charm" and the property overall "the classic configuration of an early medieval settlement".[16]

Inhabitants

At least two people associated with the Wodehouse have added to the musical life of the country.

18th century: Sir Samuel Hellier

The Wodehouse was acquired by Samuel Hellier by the 1720s. He was Oxford educated, and evidently, through his collections, open to new and foreign ideas. He was someone who first had a passion for eclectic knowledge and had already accumulated a substantial library and the core of an important collection of musical instruments. He died in 1751. His only son and heir, who bore the same name, was 14 and an orphan, his mother having predeceased his father. One of the boy's more sympathetic guardians was Charles Lyttelton, Dean of Exeter, who encouraged him to study at Exeter College, Oxford.[17] As a young man, he wrote of his longing to marry, but never did so, blaming in part his finances. His maternal grandmother, Sarah Huntbach of Seawall, a dowager heiress, controlled the Featherstone part of his estate.[18]

Despite these constraints, he managed to redesign the Wodehouse's expansive gardens, as described above. He became High Sheriff of Staffordshire like his father before him , a position now largely ceremonial but then the principal law enforcement officer of the county, and was knighted in 1762. In addition to the items for which he was famous, he collected beautiful or unusual objects: a gold cane-handle depicting the intertwining of the emblems of several local families was bequeathed to the Ashmolean Museum.[19]

Sir Samuel spent a great deal of money on collecting a musical treasure trove of instruments and newly published works.[17] He was particularly interested in Handel;[20] indeed, the catalogue accompanying the National Portrait Gallery exhibition marking the tercentenary of the composer's birth calls Sir Samuel, and abolitionist Granville Sharp, two men of the late eighteenth century "who have left us solid evidence of the means by which they indulged their enthusiasm".[21] He was also a "prominent figure at the Three Choirs Festival",[22] one of the world’s oldest classical choral music festivals.[23]

For centuries the families at the Wodehouse, as was usual for the squirearchy, were closely connected with the Church of England in general and the village church in particular, which holds several memorials to them.[24][25] Sir Samuel endowed both the ancient Wombourne Benedict Biscop and the new St John's Church, Wolverhampton, which opened in 1760.[26] He provided an organ for his parish church,[27] and his correspondence with this organist regarding playing techniques has recently been rediscovered, and is cited approvingly.[28]

Sir Samuel's grandmother lived to be 99, and he survived not two years longer, dying in the autumn of 1784. He never married and left his property to his lifelong friend Thomas Shaw, minister at St John's Wolverhampton[29] and perpetual curate of Claverley circa 1765–1810.[30] A condition of inheritance was that the recipient change his name to that of his benefactor, and in 1786 Reverend Shaw became Shaw-Hellier. He lived at the Wodehouse with his wife Mary, worked at St. John's Wolverhampton and at Tipton, and died in 1812.[18] His son James, manager of Netherton colliery, died in 1827;[18] he had also been known to steward the races at nearby Penn Common.[31] The family continued its close ties with St. John's Wolverhampton; in addition to Sir Samuel's endowment and his successor's work there, in 1820 a daughter of the house, Parthenia, married the minister.[32] Sons of the house went into the ministry, including several successive generations named Thomas.[33]

19th century: Colonel T. B. Shaw-Hellier

For a period in the middle of the century Thomas Shaw-Hellier, the grandson and direct heir of the Reverend Thomas Shaw, rented out the property. Being a keen huntsman, he preferred the country seats of Packwood House and latterly Rodbaston Hall. In his absence, Philip Stanhope, 1st Baron Weardale, the Liberal politician, pacifist, and philanthropist, and his wife Alexandra Tolstoy apparently lived for a time in the Wodehouse. Stanhope was elected to Parliament in 1886, sitting first for nearby Wednesbury. One of their houseguests at the Wodehouse was William Ewart Gladstone.[34]

The second historically significant musical person from the Wodehouse is Colonel Thomas Bradney Shaw-Hellier (1836–1910). He made a career in military music, spending several years as commandant of the Royal Military School of Music at Kneller Hall, where a prize for composition—a gold-mounted baton—was named in his honour.[35] He was responsible for the Musical Division of the Royal Military Exhibition at Chelsea in 1890. Over the five-month exhibition, he brought 74 military bands from all over the country to perform by the River Thames. A large collection of musical instruments, particularly wind instruments, was displayed, and a catalogue was issued the following year under his direction.[36] He was also a liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Musicians, donating a banner and co-organising the tercentenary celebrations at the beginning of the 20th century.[37] His military career saw him rise to command the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards.[38][39]

He was a gentleman farmer, described as a leading breeder of Jersey cattle.[40][41] Like his predecessor, he supported the established church, in his case commemorating the quincentenary of Winchester College by endowing the Cathedral with altar and fittings.[42] He is listed in The Charitable Ten Thousand.[43]

20th and 21st centuries

In the words of one local historian who has documented the gentry families of the area, "The whole inter-marrying and single child families came to a sterile conclusion in 1898 when Thomas Bradney Shaw-Hellier married Harriet Bradney Marsh Evans".[44] They were distant cousins; he was over, and she was almost, 60 years old: they had no children. The marriage was characterised as "disastrous, wild, brief"[45] and his response was to leave England and set himself a new project. He moved to Sicily, then in its heyday for the British visitor, and settled in Taormina, a place welcoming to artists and homosexuals, and made more so by the photographs of Wilhelm von Gloeden.[46] In 1907 he commissioned Ashbee, who had renovated the Wodehouse a decade before, to build him a marble villa on the hilltop, which they named Villa San Giorgio,[47][48] after the patron saint of England. Fiona MacCarthy, the biographer of the architect, judges it "the most impressive of Ashbee's remaining buildings".[49] It survives as the Hotel Ashbee.

She also gives some insight into the life and spirit of the Colonelle inglese. Ashbee was gay or bisexual, and she thinks Shaw-Hellier may have been too.[50] The Ashbees saw him as childlike, "perpetually young" and sprightly even in his 70s, enthusiastic, unpompous, devoted "to all the little simple helpful things of life", and erratic in his musical taste. He died in Sicily in 1910.

The estate passed to his nephew Evelyn Simpson, who changed his name to Shaw-Hellier; his ancestors had owned a brewery in Baldock since the 1770s. On his death in 1922, the estate passed to Evelyn's daughter Evelyn Mary Penelope Shaw-Hellier, his son having been killed in World War I.[51][52] The two surviving Shaw-Hellier sisters lived in the Wodehouse (and possibly also in the Villa San Giorgio[53]), maintaining their connections with the church and village (e.g. donating a substantial sum of money towards the building of a second church) and were described as "delightfully Edwardian [with] a taste for fast motoring".[54] The last of the pair died in 1980, and the Wodehouse—still without being sold—passed to distant relatives, the Phillips, who live there privately, occasionally opening the house and grounds to the public.[55][56][57] The Wodehouse still holds a significant collection of 18th century drinking glasses, as well as portraits and porcelain.[58]

There is a Shaw Hellier Avenue named after the family, in the nearby Brierley Hill.

Musical legacy

The musical collection is most closely associated with Sir Samuel Hellier, but the most valuable item within it preceded him, and those who came after him maintained or added to the printed works and instruments. The Hellier Stradivarius of circa 1679 is a violin made by Antonio Stradivari of Cremona, Italy. Cozio, an instrument authentication business, states that it was in the possession of Sir Edward Hellier in 1734,[59] so it is possible that the Englishman bought it directly from the elderly luthier himself, perhaps during a grand tour. It was kept by the family for almost two hundred years. In 1880, it was sold by Colonel Shaw-Hellier, but he repurchased it ten years later. Upon his death in 1910, it passed out of the family.

The Galpin Society rediscovered the treasure trove in a room in the stableblock in the 1960s. A researcher who did some of the cataloguing the following decade states that it was rare to find a collection in which both instruments and books survive,[54] but the collection was split up soon afterwards. The instruments went to the Edinburgh University Collection of Historic Musical Instruments.[60] A single one that was chosen or commissioned by Sir Samuel Hellier—in this case a trumpet—has been described in half a dozen journals and catalogues.[61] The other half of the collection, the written works, went to the music library of the Barber Institute of Fine Arts at the University of Birmingham, where its 860 items were fully documented by Ian Ledsham in 1999.[62] This includes rare copies of musical works, such as the Ten Voluntaries by John Bennett. In addition, and still at the Wodehouse, is a series of 165 letters Sir Samuel wrote to his estate manager, specifying how instruments were to be played and stored, a boon for the music historian.[17]

Non-musical gifts were made to museums as well. For example, a model of a 64-gun ship with rigging, made in the late 18th century, was donated to the Pitt Rivers Museum in the late 19th.[63]

See also

References

  1. "Friends of Broadfield House". From the Stourbridge News, 18 May 2007
  2. English Heritage list entry
  3. English Heritage list entry
  4. English Heritage list entry
  5. English Heritage list entry
  6. English Heritage list entry
  7. English Heritage list entry
  8. J.R. Studd's review of The Victoria County History of the County of Staffordshire. Vol. XX. Edited by M. W. Greenslade. Oxford University Press for the Institute of Historical Research, 1984. xix+250 pp. 47 illustrations. 19 maps and plans.
  9. [Peter Hayden in Garden History, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Spring, 1985)]
  10. A survey of Staffordshire: containing the antiquities of that county by Sampson Erdeswicke, Thomas Harwood
  11. A Topographical Dictionary of England (1848)
  12. 12.0 12.1 Victoria County History, vol. XX,(1984) pp.205-6, quoted in the English Heritage list entry
  13. Staffordshire Places: Staffordshire and Stoke on Trent Archive Service
  14. Summer 2011, Issue 44 of the newsletter of the Staffordshire Gardens and Parks Trust. "Of these, only one is open under the Scheme in 2011 – The Wombourne Wodehouse, which first opened in 1936, – though the total number of gardens open in Staffordshire this year is sixty-seven..."
  15. Vol. XX Staffordshire, VCH
  16. Guide to Staffordshire and the Black Country, The Potteries and the Peak By Michael Raven, p372. 2004
  17. 18.0 18.1 18.2 THE HUNTBACH FAMILY OF SEAWALL AND FEATHERSTONE
  18. Museum entry, with explanations
  19. Best, Terence, ed. Handel collections and their history, a collection of conference papers given by the international panel of distinguished Handel scholars. Clarendon Press, 1993
  20. p 239. Handel, a celebration of his life and times, 1685-1759. Jacob Simon, National Portrait Gallery (Great Britain), 1985.
  21. The British Institute of Organ Studies ISSN 0309-8052. BIOS Reporter Volume 28, number 4, page 15. October 2004.
  22. Three Choirs web site Retrieved 15 August 2009
  23. Staffordshire Encyclopedia Church Memorials: Wombourne
  24. St Benedict Biscop Guidebook. "One of the kneelers shows the Wombourne Wodehouse, a large country home, whose family have been benefactors of our church for generations."
  25. "A Tale of Two Squares: St. John's and St. James's" by Maureen Hunt]
  26. Pitt, William. A Topographical History of Staffordshire. J. Smith, 1817. p187
  27. The Registration of Baroque Organ Music. By Barbara Owen. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997. P102.
  28. Shaw, Stebbing. The History and Antiquities of Staffordshire p164
  29. Shropshire Archives "Some Notes on the Living of Claverley, Salop, based on the personal account book and other papers of the Rev Thomas Shaw, later Shaw Hellier" typescript by J S Allen
  30. Penn Common by Bev Parker
  31. New Monthly Magazine, 1820, p710.
  32. Shaw-Hellier family history site
  33. Review by Eugenio F. Biagini of Gladstone: Heroic Minister, 1865-1898. Professor R. T. Shannon. London: Allen Lane, 1999, xvii+702 pp.
  34. "Band Gossip for Far and Near" by Tomtom. Star , Issue 6144, 2 April 1898, Page 6
  35. A Descriptive Catalogue of the Musical Instruments recently exhibited at the Royal Military Exhibition, London, 1890. Issued under the orders of Colonel Shaw-Hellier and compiled by Captain Charles Russell Day, Oxfordshire Light Infantry. Eyre & Spottiswoode, Government and General Publishers, London. xii, 254pp. 1891. Shaw-Hellier's introduction is transcribed here
  36. Full text of The Worshipful Company of Musicians, 2nd ed. 1905
  37. Hansard record, HC Deb 01 December 1882 vol 275 cc494-5
  38. London Gazette, 21 November 1862
  39. English Jersey Society, quoted in FARM AND STATION, Otago Witness, 25 January 1900, Page 14
  40. The 1897 English Jersey Cattle Society's herd book, Volume 8, lists him too.
  41. The Church Times 20 August 1897, cited in the 2007 notes to Bell's Cathedrals: The Cathedral Church of Winchester: A Description of Its Fabric and a Brief History of the Episcopal See by Philip Walsingham Sergeant 1899
  42. The charitable ten thousand. H. Grant, 1896
  43. Morgan Fourman
  44. MacCarthy, Fiona.The Simple Life: C.R. Ashbee in the Cotswolds. University of California Press, 1981 (pg. 158)
  45. Chaney, Edward. The Evolution of the Grand Tour: Anglo-Italian Cultural Relations Since the Renaissance. Frank Cass & Co., 1998. P38-39
  46. RIBA archive drawings
  47. MacCarthy, Fiona.The Simple Life: C.R. Ashbee in the Cotswolds. University of California Press, 1981. Chapter 7, "The death of Conradin"
  48. MacCarthy, Fiona.The Simple Life:C.R. Ashbee in the Cotswolds. University of California Press, 1981. p 161
  49. MacCarthy, Fiona.The Simple Life: C.R. Ashbee in the Cotswolds. University of California Press, 1981. p159: "Taormina was an obvious place for Colonel Shaw Hellier, retired soldier as he was with some artistic leanings, as susceptible as Ashbee - if not more so - to the glories of Sicilian boyhood, to choose to end his days." On the same page, she quotes a description by Ashbee of Shaw-Hellier's "bevy of Sicilian boy retainers...with large dreamy eyes".
  50. Mike Brown. "On the Trail of the Phillips", Brewery History, 111, pp. 37-63. 2003, based on Journal 49 October 1986.
  51. Illustrated London News 1915
  52. MacCarthy, Fiona.The Simple Life: C.R. Ashbee in the Cotswolds. University of California Press, 1981. Chapter 7, "The death of Conradin", footnote 1.
  53. 54.0 54.1 Review of Ledsham's 1999 catalogue, by P. Ward Jones. Music and Letters 2001 82(2):312-314; doi:10.1093/ml/82.2.312
  54. Visit by the STAFFORD DECORATIVE & FINE ARTS SOCIETY
  55. Visit by the Hagley Historical and Field Society (July 2011)
  56. South Staffordshire Conservative Association reception, September 2011
  57. Halesowen News, from the Stourbridge News, first published Friday 18 May 2007 Friends of Broadfield House Glass Museum, report of visit.
  58. Cozio page on Hellier Stradivarius
  59. CIMCIM INTERNATIONAL DIRECTORY OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENT COLLECTIONS
  60. EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY COLLECTION OF HISTORIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 18th century brass instruments
  61. Volume 57, Number 3, March 2001. E-ISSN: 1534-150X Print ISSN: 0027-4380. doi:10.1353/not.2001.0030. A Catalogue of the Shaw-Hellier Collection in the Music Library, Barber Institute of Fine Arts, The University of Birmingham (review by David Hunter) Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association - Volume 57, Number 3, March 2001, pp. 610-611
  62. ENGLAND: THE OTHER WITHIN Analysing the English Collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum

Further reading

External links

Coordinates: 52°32′23″N 2°10′13″W / 52.5396°N 2.1704°W