Redenham Park

Country house and estate in Appleshaw, Hampshire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Redenham Park is an estate in the civil parish of Appleshaw,[a] Hampshire, England, surrounding Redenham House, an 18th-century Grade II* listed country house.[1]

  • History
Architectural styleGeorgian
LocationAndover, Hampshire, England
Coordinates51.243°N 1.580°W / 51.243; -1.580
Year built1784
Quick facts General information, Architectural style ...
Redenham Park
Redenham House
Redenham Park is located in Hampshire
Redenham Park
Location within Hampshire
General information
Architectural styleGeorgian
LocationAndover, Hampshire, England
Coordinates51.243°N 1.580°W / 51.243; -1.580
Year built1784
ClientSir Charles Pollen
OwnerLady Olivia Clark
Technical details
Grounds988 acres (400 ha)
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameRedenham House
Designated20 October 1960
Reference no.1093912
Close

The house was built in 1784 for Sir Charles Pollen and is a classical mansion faced with Bath stone, standing to two storeys with a slate roof and sash windows, and a central porch with coupled Ionic columns.[2]

It descended in the Pollen family via Sir John Pollen, 2nd Baronet to the latter's great nephew Sir Richard Hungerford Pollen, 4th Baronet.

In the late 19th century the house was occupied by Major A.W.Fulcher, a well-known cricketer and yachtsman.

From 1976 the house and estate belonged to Sir John Clark, the chairman of Plessey.[3] It is now occupied by his widow, Lady Olivia Clark.

The park and gardens have been described as 'the perfect setting for a Jane Austen novel'. They comprise 2.5 hectares of garden, 24 hectares of parkland, 36.5 hectares of woodland and 337 hectares of farmland.[4] The gardens are featured in The Good Gardens Guide and are open to the public by appointment.[5]

Notes

^ Transferred from Fyfield to Appleshaw in 2005 (The Test Valley (Parishes) Order 2005)

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI