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Strawberry hill
Strawberry hill





strawberry hill

It is open for public viewings but advance booking is advisable. Much of the building has recently been restored and the process will continue for a while yet. Dulwich Picture Gallery is delighted to lend over fifty paintings to Strawberry Hill House, Twickenham, the former home of the writer, antiquarian and. St Mary’s College (now St Mary’s Univer­sity) moved from Brook Green to Straw­berry Hill in 1925, and the mansion was further extended. Strawberry Hill is a venue in Twickenham, a neo-gothic estate with gardens, perfect for weddings, celebrations and corporate events. House­building continued to fill out the area into the early 20th century. One of these devel­opers was Chich­ester Fortescue, Frances’s fourth husband, who laid out streets of villas on the edge of the family estate. Some have suggested that the station was built at the behest of the countess, for the conve­nience of her house guests, but it is more probable that property spec­u­la­tors pres­surised the railway company into providing the facility. In the following year the railway passed to the west of the house but it was ten years before a station opened in Straw­berry Hill.

strawberry hill

Frances, widow of the seventh Earl of Walde­grave, added a new wing of her own design in 1862. After Walpole’s death in 1797 the property passed to his relatives, the Walde­grave family. Walpole spent much of his life adding extra rooms and features to the ‘little cottage’, creating a Gothic fantasy that became famous throughout Europe, set in a nine-acre land­scaped garden. Like Hampton Hill and Marble Hill, there is no real hill here, merely a slight elevation of the terrain. Straw­ber­ries are known to have been grown in the area before this time and commer­cial fruit gardens were later estab­lished nearby. He renamed the house Straw­berry Hill, after a field in the grounds. In 1698 the Earl of Bradford’s retired coachman built or bought a house here, which was acquired in 1747 by the politi­cian and man of letters Horace Walpole. Horace Walpole’s Strawberry Hill, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, (UK), p.35Ĭraftsmanship and quality are absolutely central to everything we do at Howe London and we are passionate about promoting and preserving traditional skills, click here to read more.Strawberry Hill, Richmond upon Thames A riverside locality situated between Twickenham and Teddington, centred on one of London’s most sumptuous mansions Image reference for Watercolour of Great Parlour: The chairs are very labour intensive and therefore the leadtime will be dependant on workload. He chose to take the inspiration for his house and furnishings from the Gothic features found in medieval churches and published engravings of medieval architecture rather than contemporary pattern books.įurther to the four that we made, now in the Great Parlour at Strawberry Hill, our same chair maker will produce a limited edition of 30. The Gothic Revival style was fashionable in the mid C18th for decoration of interiors and Horace Walpole remodelled his entire house in the Gothic style, rather than the more typical one or two rooms. The chairs were to be very lightweight, painted black and with a rush seat, writing to Bentley on 27 July 1754: ‘My idea is, a black back, higher, but not much higher that common chairs, and extremely light, with matted bottoms…I have been trying to make out something like windows…I would have only a sort of black sticks pierced through…’ the set was then made to Bentley’s designs by the fashionable London cabinet maker William Hallett. Walpole suggested that the backs should be based on the outline and tracery of a Gothic window. Strawberry Hill, Gothic Revival home of Horace Walpole, located on the River Thames in Twickenham (now in Richmond upon Thames, an outer borough of London). The original chairs were designed for Horace Walpole by his friend and advisor, Richard Bentley. A commission for the restoration of Strawberry Hill House in Twickenham to replicate those made in 1755 for the Great Parlour, which were sold and dispersed in the sale of the house contents in 1842, referring to one of the original eight which we were granted exclusive access to at the Victoria and Albert museum.







Strawberry hill