Thursday, June 4, 2026

Newark Park, 2

 Continuing our visit to Newark Park, Cotswolds, Gloucestershire...

Among the antiques


Crennellation...in days of yore, would have required consent of the
monarch; nowadays, maybe a zoning permit? Maybe...

The bookshop...always worth a close look...unless you're traveling lite

Amenities

Historic map of the area


Every now and then, after a more serious intervention or
restoration, the Trust will leave a hole open for you to
see the, for example, 16th century construction material
and technique; always fascinating and informative; and
sometimes makes you more aware of the emergency exits

Note the Proclis and Cephalus painting; also the quilt

Amenities, II



Very collectible blue glass



Swan collection: theorized that Parsons and Claydon asked
their numerous guests to bring contributions

More on Parsons, who saved the house and grounds

The house sits on a Cotswold escarpment...great views

Thus...[click]


A large (maybe 2 feet high) French musical automaton,
said, by the docent, to have been brought to the house by a
visitor and left there...the Trust still pondering what to do
with it

Ever vigilant

In the garden


Memorable place


Cotswold rush-hour grid-lock


Newark Park, 1

Still in the mood for something new (to us), we continued further out into the countryside to see the National Trust's Newark Park home and garden. It is not one of the great houses nor great gardens--never associated with nobility nor any important historical figures, nor great wealth--but there is much to like about it, its origins as an Elizabethan hunting lodge, growth over the centuries as a wealthy family home, decline and the real prospect of demolition, and its eventual salvation by an American ex-pat. He was Robert Parsons, a Texan stationed in the Cotswolds in WWII, who fell in love with England, earned his MA in architecture at Harvard, returned to England, apparently enjoyed a successful-enough career in antiques, and then spent the last 30 years of his life, with partner photographer Michael Claydon, saving and restoring Newark Park. Everyone loves a good salvation and redemption story, right?


Everything was going swimmingly, Vicki advancing ahead,
when this peacock seemed determined to block my passage

Fiercely; I actually had to back away and off the path...

Somehow I evaded the bird and advanced

England, spring

Oft-photographed view of the place

There is, of course, a larger used bookshop within,
normal for the Trust

Parsons and Claydon were rather, um, eclectic in their collections
and decor, so don't expect any systematic treatment here; but note
the enormous breakfront...

Curiosities; and beautiful, still-operating radio


A succession of models of the house as it grew over
the centuries...presented to us by a volunteer, older than
we...




[click to enlarge]



Incredible that this stuff is still in production and available: Morris

Parsons; more later

Among the artwork, antiques, etc.



Dress-up; but we didn't

Looking out the window to the enclosed garden

[click to enlarge]...dating back to the earliest days

Great find and restoration