Parlington Hall was the seat of the Gascoigne family, Aberford near Leeds in West Yorkshire, England.

South elevation of Parlington Hall around the 1880s
The Triumphal Arch

History edit

 
Parlington Hall (1911) by Philip Norman

The Parlington estate was acquired by the Gascoignes from the Wentworth family in 1546[citation needed]. The hall was modified by successive family members including Sir Edward Gascoigne (early eighteenth century), his son Sir Thomas Gascoigne, the last baronet (late eighteenth century), Richard Oliver-Gascoigne (early nineteenth century) and lastly Isabella and her husband Frederick in the mid- and late nineteenth century[citation needed].

The house therefore consisted of mixture of architectural styles and materials, and was set in landscaped gardens, but it was abandoned in 1905, after which incremental demolition took place until the late 1950s[citation needed]. Most (?) of what can be seen in old photographs is later than the seventeenth century [citation needed]. Pevsner (1967) does not mention the house at all, implying that nothing substantial survived by that date. [1]

Sir Thomas Gascoigne, 8th and last Baronet, succeeded his brother in 1762. Sir Thomas was M.P. for Thirsk from 1780 to 1784, for Malton in 1784 and for Arundel in 1795. He was also a keen breeder and trainer of horses and with Sir Thomas Stapleton won the St Leger Stakes in 1778 with Hollandoise and the same race twenty years later with his home-bred colt Symmetry. He supported the cause of American independence and commissioned a triumphal arch celebrating the American victory in the War of Independence which stands at the west end of the avenue leading to the estate.[2][3] The architect was Thomas Leverton.[4] The inscription is 'LIBERTY IN N.AMERICA TRIUMPHANT.MDCCLXXXIII'. Pevsner describes the lettering as 'very fine'.

The death in February 1810 of Sir Thomas Gascoigne the last baronet, aged 65 came just a few months after his heir and only child Tom had pre-deceased him as a result of an accident whilst hunting. Sir Thomas had a new will prepared and his step-daughter, Mary (second child of Sir Charles Turner and Mary Turner) benefitted with her husband Richard Oliver in a lifetime interest in the estates, a proviso being that the family took on the name of Gascoigne and that they had issue. Thereafter Richard Oliver-Gascoigne, presided over the properties [citation needed]. Richard continued the horse-racing tradition of the estate, winning the St Leger in 1811 with Soothsayer and in 1824 with Jerry. He was responsible for building the "Dark Arch" in 1813, a still existent shallow, stone-lined road tunnel which allowed traffic to pass by on Parlington Lane without disturbing the occupants of the house.[5] He was High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1816–17. Mary died in 1819 having had four children, two sons and two daughters. Both sons pre-deceased Richard Oliver-Gascoigne, and the daughters Isabella and Elizabeth inherited all his estates in 1843[citation needed].

Isabella and Elizabeth, two deeply creative women, immediately (?) commissioned the building of schools, almshouses and churches in the region[citation needed] and made huge improvements to their estates and to the living conditions of their tenantry [citation needed]. The sisters personally fabricated stained glass windows for their various projects [citation needed]. One of these survives in the park at Parlington (in which building?). Isabella's particular interest was wood-turning and she installed at least three lathes in her own workshop at Parlington, as well as writing an authoritative book on the subject (called?)[citation needed]. In 1850, Isabella married Colonel Frederick Charles Trench of Woodlawn, County Galway, Ireland. In 1852, Elizabeth married Frederick's cousin Frederick Mason Trench, 2nd Baron Ashtown, head of the Trench family. Jointly the two sisters had already built the magnificent Castle Oliver on their father's estate in Limerick, Ireland. Elizabeth and her husband lived at Castle Oliver, while Isabella and her husband continued to reside at Parlington Hall until her death in 1891.

Following the death of Frederick Charles Trench in June 1905 Parlington Hall was abandoned. His son Col. Frederick Richard Thomas Trench-Gascoigne was already established at another family residence, Lotherton Hall, to the east of the nearby village Aberford, which property he had inherited on the death of his Aunt Elizabeth [citation needed]. After 1905, much of the contents and smaller architectural features of Parlington were transferred to Lotherton, which lies on the B1217 road towards Towton and Sherburn-in-Elmet. It is open to the public,[6] and contains many Gascoigne family memorabilia.

Listed buildings edit

The Parlington estate contains a number of features: the grade II* listed Triumphal Arch, designed by Thomas Leverton and built around the end of the Eighteenth Century, which is unique in commemorating the victory of the American colonialists over the British in the American War of Independence. An inscription on both faces of the arch reads, "Liberty in N.America Triumphant MDCCLXXXIII"; a tunnel known locally as the "Dark Arch", which was built to shield the inhabitants of the hall from traffic passing along Parlington Lane, still intact almost two hundred years later; an underground icehouse, also intact — a testament to Georgian brick construction.

References edit

  1. ^ Pevsner, N. & Radcliffe, E., The Buildings of England: Yorkshire West Riding, 2nd ed., Penguin 1967, p.69
  2. ^ "Article about the Parlington Triumphal Arch". Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  3. ^ Hewetson, Christopher; Valadier, Luigi (16 August 1778). "Sir Thomas Gasgoine, 8th Baronet of Parlington (1745-1810)". Retrieved 16 August 2023 – via Victoria & Albert Museum.
  4. ^ Pevsner, op cit
  5. ^ "Parlington Hall :: The Dark Arch". parlington.co.uk. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  6. ^ "Lotherton Hall and Estate". Leeds Museums & Galleries. Retrieved 16 August 2023.

53°49′08″N 1°21′35″W / 53.81899°N 1.3597°W / 53.81899; -1.3597