Saturday, June 29, 2013

Clevedon Court

We wanted to see Clevedon Court for its great age--a manor house built originally in 1320, and pretty much unchanged architecturally--as well as for its literary associations...Thackeray, Tennyson, Wordsworth, Coleridge, etc. And we found much more.
Frontal view














Vicki holding up the portcullis for the next
timed entry



















First surprise: one of the largest and most impressive glass
collections we've seen outside Murano and the V&A; the
pipes...
















The rolling pins


















Some miscellaneous; the collection filled the
better part of two rooms



















Next surprise: baby furniture, some Medieval,
some Renaissance, some later, all over the
house




















Baby rocker...back and forth and side to side


















1580, I think














And another














Massive old table and chairs in the (new) main
hall (the original main hall was built 50-80
years before the main house and served as
the house's kitchen from 1320 to 1957; with
a few upgrades, hopefully)






















Painting by a member of the family, showing the
trial of an accused poacher before the lord of the manor















18th century view of the manor














Family daughter Jane, with whom Thackeray
fell hopelessly in love; she figures largely in
Henry Esmond, much of which was written in
the house; the Eltons, the family that have
lived here going on 800 years, have been
quite artistic/literary at times






















Nephew Arthur Hallam, the subject of
Tennyson's In Memoriam, A. H. H., one of
the 19th century's greatest literary works...
"tis better to have loved and lost..."





















Moving right along, there are Coleridge and Lamb, flanked
by Bill and Dottie, other friends of the Eltons















Closer up (the light was awful); note the guy
outside, smoking 



















Last surprise: the family more recently
included Edmund Elton, a noted ceramic
artist of the "Arts and Crafts" movement,
late 19th/early 20th century





















The old main hall/later kitchen contains a
large collection of his work



















The kitchen (1320-1957) hearth; note oven, left














And a final high/multi-use chair


















View of Clevedon Court from the garden










Ladye Bay, 2013

We drove on to our next house, Clevedon Court, and found one of the best wild-camping sites yet, a few miles from the house, up by a park on the coastal path. Quiet, beautiful, in a good neighborhood too--mansions overlooking Ladye Bay and the Bristol Channel.
Ladye Bay, low tide, looking toward Clevedon Pier














Across the Channel, a bit of Cardiff and Wales, I think












Low tide pebble beach; hours later this will be under 20 feet of water














Clevedon Pier













Very serious tides here; in the spring people actually surf the tidal bores...going
on for miles and miles I suppose; Bristol is at the end of the Channel, and all
this gives rise to the expression "Ship shape and Bristol fashion"; before 1805,
when the first "floating dock" was constructed, ships docking at Bristol could
be on their sides at low tide; and everything had better be securely fastened...














And I was there












Next morning, tide coming in














The beach pretty much gone














Fishermen (-persons) like tides 

Tyntesfield House

And now the house tour...
Garden view














Main entrance; Gothic, yes?!














In the library; best organized library yet














Now in the dining room; Tyntesfield was one of the first great houses to get
electricity; the switches were carefully concealed in the glorious paneling and
woodwork














Wonderfully-carved side board in the dining room; we thought the walls were
covered in leather; but no, it is fabric, the pink background of which was painted
white by servants; four giant walls














"You rang, sir?" episode #23; out in the hall behind the dining room, the kitchens
behind us, the servants' main block beyond the door; a boy was stationed in the
hall here to monitor the bells and notify appropriate servants which rooms were
ringing














Gothic writing desk






















Gothic fire place


















Up the main staircase, family portraits














Including founder William Gibbs, Emperor of Guano,
reputedly the richest commoner of the age; his company
cornered the South American bat guano market; all these
British gardens require a lot of fertilizer






















And then, after the bedrooms, quite a few rooms of furnishings the Trust
apparently hasn't decided what to do with...
















Including this incredible bed; still has the Christies' auction
tag on it, I think



















Now in the family chapel; serious Gothic; they were reportedly very devout














And finally, an outside view of the chapel

Tyntesfield Gardens

Our next stop was Tyntesfield, a relatively young house, Victorian, and a relatively recent National Trust acquisition, 2002, by way of L20,000,000 two-month public drive that rescued the house and all its contents from public auction. It is a neo-Gothic country house, suberbly done, all of a piece, with four generations of Victorian and later furnishings; plus several hundred acres of park and gardens. We started our visit with a garden and park tour.
A beautiful asian plane tree that caught my attention even before the guide said
it was her favorite tree at Tyntesfield














A giant purple beech, one of several














The interesting thing is, when you stand under a purple
beech, the leaves are green














Waste not, want not...well, that didn't exactly work out for the Gibbs family,
but they did save much, benefiting all the rest of us; these are spiral staircase
parts later used as a planter in one of the gardens














Garden view of the house; a giant monkey puzzle had stood here for years, now
replaced by this youngster














A disused azalea maze that the Trust hopes to rebuild; they have much work to
do here, as elsewhere




















Beautiful green; it's summer now, despite the fact the
temperature has yet to go much above 70




















Out in the building adjoining the walled (kitchen) garden and green-houses;
the green-houses were heated, so some of the servants slept out here, in the
little bunk cabins, to keep the fires going














Cherry tree on the kitchen garden wall
















A chef's "chop and chat" out in the garden; wonderful free samples of breads,
strawberries, fruit drinks, etc.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Dyrham Park House

The house, with its large orangery to the left (conceals servants' block)















One of two bookcases designed by Blathwayt friend, diarist
Samuel Pepys; the other is in the V&A




















Marrow spoons; we've just got to get some for our camping kit














Murillos' boy teasing a woman eating porridge


















Staircase, as seen in...














An episode of Dr. Who filmed at Dyrham














Flower vase, reflecting the Dutch thing... there were several
more



















Inside the door is A View Down a Corridor, by Samuel van Hoogstrattaen















Royal bed--just in case the monarch dropped by--never
did, never slept in



















Figurine collection


















During WWII, Dyrham was home to babies and toddlers moved away from the
areas being bombed by the Germans; a photo from the garden
















"You rang, sir?" episode #7














Hundreds of antique Delft tiles, once, presumably, from Blathwayt's office, now
adorning the dairy