Hazlewood Castle
Hazlewood Castle is a country residence, now a hotel, situated in North Yorkshire, England by the A1 and A64 between Aberford and Tadcaster.
The site overlooked the battlefield for the Battle of Towton in 1461, and during the persecution of Catholics through the reign of Henry VIII provided refuge for Catholic priests.
History
The first records of the house are to be found in the Domesday Book, described as being owned and occupied by Sir Mauger the Vavasour (a vavasour is a type of sub-tenant). Hazlewood was then inhabited by descendants of the Vavasours for over 900 years. During the Second Barons' War (1264-1267) the house was burnt down by a rival branch of the Vavasour family. It was rebuilt in 1283 by Sir William Vavasour and in 1290 fortified and crennelated.
In 1217 Robert Vavasour was Sheriff of York and his statue was placed above the door of York cathedral in recognition of the fact that he gave stone from his Tadcaster quarry to maintain the cathedral.
Sir William Vavasour was High Sheriff of Yorkshire for 1548 and 1563 and MP for Yorkshire in 1553.[1] His son John Vavasour was host to Mary, Queen of Scots on the night of 27 January 1569, when she passed through Wetherby en-route between Bolton Castle and Tutbury Castle.[2]
John was convicted in 1610 of being a Catholic recusant. His nephew and heir William was gaoled for five years in Newgate prison for the same reason. William's son Thomas was forced to pay an annual fine even though he had been made a baronet in 1628. The second Baronet was a Royalist during the Civil War and was obliged to flee to France, not returning until the restoration of the monarchy in 1660.[3]
Under the 6th Baronet the house was substantially modernised. On the death of the unmarried 7th Baronet in 1826 the baronetcy was extinguished and the estate passed to Edward Stourton, a relative. In 1828 he took the name Vavasour and was made the 1st Baronet Vavasour of the second creation. In 1908 the Vavasour family sold Hazlewood and bought a vineyard in Awatere, New Zealand. After 1908 the site changed hands many times over the following years. It was first owned by a solicitor named Simpson, whose family occupied it until 1953, although it also served as a maternity hospital during the Second World War (and afterwards until 1953). For a few years it then belonged to the Fawcett family until it was sold in 1958 to Donald Hart, who sold it on as a retreat for the Carmelite Friars from 1971 until 1996.[4] In 1997, after restoration, the house reopened as Hazlewood Castle Hotel under the mamagement of Lewis Hanson.
References
- ↑ "VAVASOUR, Sir William (1514-66), of Hazlewood, Yorks". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
- ↑ Bain, Joseph, ed., Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 2 (1900), pp. 605, 612
- ↑ "THE VAVASOURS OF HAZLEWOOD CASTLE". July 2007. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
- ↑ "History of Hazlewood Castle". Retrieved 7 February 2013.
External links
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Coordinates: 53°51′08″N 1°19′09″W / 53.8523°N 1.3192°W