Toddington Manor, Gloucestershire

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Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor is in Gloucestershire, England
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor (England)
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor (the United Kingdom)
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor (Europe)

Toddington Manor is a 19th-century country house in the English county of Gloucestershire, near the village of Toddington. It is in the gothic style and was designed by Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 1st Baron Sudeley for himself and built between 1819 and 1840. Upon its completion, a volume on its architecture was published by John Britton (antiquary).[1] It is a Grade I listed building.

Toddington Manor
Toddington Manor clad in sheeting from 2006 to 2022

Hanbury-Tracy was a gentleman-architect who was influenced by the work of John Carter of the Society of Antiquaries. As one of the earliest Gothic Revival houses, the building shaped the course of British architectural history in an indirect way: when the Houses of Parliament were to be rebuilt after the fire in 1834, Hanbury-Tracy headed the jury to the competition, and the architect of the winning design, Charles Barry, obviously adapted his entry to the taste exemplified in Toddington.[2] The family owned the house until 1893 when Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 4th Baron Sudeley, and his writer wife Ada had to sell due to bankruptcy.

Toddington Manor by Jan Kip, 1709, showing the remnant of its moat, its parish church and half-timbered outbuildings contrasting with its fine, brand-new formal garden

The last private owner, Isabel Andrews, whose husband had bought the estate in 1901, died in 1935 and it stood empty until September 1939, when it was purchased by the National Union of Teachers, who had moved out of London to avoid air raids. The NUT staff both lived and worked in the building. Following Dunkirk a tented encampment was erected in the grounds and temporarily occupied by men evacuated from the beaches. They were later followed by units of the British Army.

In 1942 the Pioneer Corps built a more permanent hutted encampment, which was occupied by units of the United States Army from October 1942. In August 1943 the NUT moved back to London and the US Army took over the house as well. After the war the Congregation of Christian Brothers rented the property and in 1948 the NUT sold it to them. In the late 1970s, it was converted into an international boarding school, Toddington Manor College. In 2004, following the school's closure, planning permission to convert it into a hotel was denied after the scheme had attracted considerable local opposition.

In 2005 it was purchased by the artist Damien Hirst who planned to restore it and use it as a family home and a gallery, both his own works and for his collection of works by other artists.[3] Since 2006, Toddington Manor has been encased in what Hirst claims is the world's biggest span of scaffolding.[4][5] As at 2022, the manor remains encased in scaffolding and sheeting, restoration work having stalled for over 17 years.[6][7] The manor is listed on Historic England’s Heritage at Risk Register.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ Britton, John (1840). "Graphic illustrations, with historical and descriptive accounts, of Toddington, Gloucestershire, the seat of Lord Sudeley". The Author. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  2. ^ Schmidt, Leo: "Toddington Manor: The Genesis of a Gothic Revival Country House." Construction Techniques in the Age of Historicism, Munich 2012: 34-45.
  3. ^ "Artist Hirst buys up manor house". BBC News website. 1 September 2005. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
  4. ^ Damien Hirst, Melvyn Bragg (7 January 2007). The South Bank Show: Damien Hirst - Addicted to Art (TV). ITV.
  5. ^ "English Buildings: Toddington, Gloucestershire".
  6. ^ Thomas, Aled (10 January 2022). "Patience running out with Damien Hurst over eyesore of Toddington Manor". Gloucestershire Live.
  7. ^ Humpfries, Will (10 January 2022). "Neighbors are tired of Damien Hirst's giant white blob". The Times.
  8. ^ "Toddington Manor". Historic England. Retrieved 25 March 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Britton, John: Graphic Illustrations ... of Toddington, London 1840.
  • Schmidt, Leo: "Toddington Manor: The Genesis of a Gothic Revival Country House." Construction Techniques in the Age of Historicism, Munich 2013: 34–45. ISBN 978-3-7774-3901-3

External links edit

51°59′53″N 1°56′53″W / 51.997938°N 1.948062°W / 51.997938; -1.948062 (Toddington Manor)