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The Forgotten Country House - The Rise and Fall of Roundway Park (Hardcover)
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The Forgotten Country House - The Rise and Fall of Roundway Park (Hardcover)
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This fine Palladian house known as New Park was built between 1777
and 1783 and became part of the golden age of the Georgian country
house. Its owner, James Sutton, was one of a new breed of
landowners, benefitting from the proceeds of the boom in late
eighteenth century trade and from local political influence. The
house was a celebration of the dynamism and success of Georgian
Devizes, built on its thriving wool trade. As neoclassicism became
the defining style for the late eighteenth English country house,
New Park, later re-named Roundway Park, perfectly represented the
high ambition of the age, the product of the prestigious architect,
James Wyatt, and landscape designer, Humphry Repton. Roundway
continued to prosper in the Victorian and Edwardian eras under the
ownership of the Colston family of Bristol fame. In 1938, on the
death of Rosalind Colston, the first Lady Roundway, the house and
estate were, on the surface, indistinguishable from their Victorian
heyday. But just sixteen years later, the estate had been sold and
the house largely demolished as the effects of family tragedy and
the weight of social and economic change took their toll. The
Forgotten Country House tells for the first time the story of
Roundway's rise and fall, the people who built and owned it, lived
and worked there, and the contribution they made to their local
community. It paints a vivid picture of the lives of gentry
families who far outnumbered their more aristocratic counterparts
and who played a central role in the rural communities that
characterised much of Britain up until the mid-twentieth century.
Part family history, part love letter to the English country house,
Simon Baynes draws on family papers and new research to pay a
fitting, evocative tribute not just to his ancestors, but also to a
lost world and the people who lived in it.
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