Hilton Hall, Cambridgeshire

Hilton Hall, Cambridgeshire, is a Grade II* listed English country house dating from the 17th century.

Description

With an entrance onto the village High Street at Hilton, Cambridgeshire, in the district of Huntingdonshire, Hilton Hall is a brick-built gentleman's house first built in the early 17th century. It has three storeys, and the ground plan takes the shape of a letter T. The front elevation has an 18th-century facade. The roof is tiled, with a parapet and parapet gables and with chimney stacks with recessed panels. Inside is a magnificent early 17th-century oak staircase with six flights of steps. The beams are moulded, with decorated stops, and in the hall is 18th-century panelling. A 20th-century one-storey extension to the rear of the house also has 18th-century panelling, which came from the nearby Park Farm when it was demolished.[1]

Standing to the south of the main house is a fine square dovehouse with a hipped pyramid roof, believed to date from the late 17th century.[2]

An article in Country Life magazine in 2001 notes that "The original position of the windows in the 17th century is entirely lost under the mid-18th-century rearrangement, with the bizarre structural result that internally beams run into the lintels of the main windows".[2]

From the village street, the main entrance has two red brick gate piers with ball finials and wrought iron gates (dated 1845) giving onto a forecourt.[1]

Residents

According to one account, Hilton Hall was built for Robert Walpole, gentleman, who still owned it when he died in 1699 aged one hundred.[2]

The house has strong connections with the Bloomsbury Group. In 1924 it was acquired by the writer David Garnett, and he lived there until the 1960s, initially with his first wife, Ray Marshall (1891–1940), sister of Frances Partridge, and later with his second wife, Angelica Garnett, daughter of Duncan Grant and Vanessa Bell.[3] Amaryllis Garnett grew up here, and her friend Liz Hodgkinson later described it as "a magic garden, like nothing I'd seen before", recalling Jersey cows, an orchard, a swimming pool, sculptures, and the dovehouse.[4]

In 2001 the house was still lived in by Richard Garnett, son of the writer, and his wife.[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Hilton Hall, Gate Piers Forecourt Wall, Hilton, at britishlistedbuildings.co.uk, accessed 3 February 2017
  2. 1 2 3 4 Country Life magazine, Volume 195, Issues 8-13 (2001), p. 90
  3. Frances Spalding, Angelica Garnett obituary in The Guardian dated 7 May 2012 online, accessed 3 February 2017
  4. Liz Hodgkinson, Poisoned legacy of the Bloomsbury Set dated 23 May 2012 at dailymail.co.uk, accessed 1 February 2017

Coordinates: 52°16′49″N 0°06′33″W / 52.2803°N 0.1092°W / 52.2803; -0.1092

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