Mannington Hall

Mannington Hall

The south facade
General information
Type Historic house
Architectural style Medieval, Moated great house
Location Near Itteringham, Norfolk, NR11 7BB
Country England
Coordinates 52°50′34″N 1°10′55″E / 52.842864°N 1.181826°E / 52.842864; 1.181826
Completed 1464
Renovated 1864
Cost £20.000
Client Horatio Walpole, 1st Baron Walpole
Owner Robert Walpole, 10th Baron Walpole
Technical details
Structural system Iron stained flints and knapped flints. Pantile roof
Website

Wolterton Hall website

Listed Building – Grade I
Designated 25 February 1952
Reference no. 224070[1]

Mannington Hall is a moated medieval country house in the civil parish of Itteringham near the village of the same name and is in the English county of Norfolk within the United Kingdom.[2] The first manor house built on this site was constructed in the 15th century.[3] Having been owned by the Walpole family since the 18th century, it is now owned and occupied by Robert Walpole, 10th Baron Walpole and only open to the public by appointment.[4][5]

The Gardens are open in the Summer Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday. see manningtongardens.co.uk for details

Etymology

The name Mannington devolved from the Anglo-Saxon language and has the meaning of the enclosure (tun or ton) owned by the people (ing or ingus) of Manna’s.[6]

History

Mannington is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086.[7] In the great Survey it is under the name Manctura. Before 1066 the manor had been held by Godwin[8] but at the time of the survey it was held by the King[8] and the Norman nobelman William de Warenne.[9] There stood on the site an ancient house which in 1291, after many changes came into the possession of Maude Turrell who was the daughter and heiress of Walter Turrell of Mannington and Itteringham.[10] She married a man called Walter Hewell[10] who also had an alias of Dennell. By her own right Maude was lord of the manor and when she married her second husband, Henry Lumner,[10] he also was lord of the manor. Their Grandson, also Henry, took possession of the house and manor in 1401[10] and held it in right of his late wife, the heiress of Maude Dennell. Henry died shortly after and the land and possessions passed to his son and heir William Lumner. He in turn left it to his son also William Lumner who decided to rebuild Mannington Hall to the house that stands today

William Lumner

The house at Mannington was built at the instruction of William Lumnor, the brother of Margaret Paston and a trusted friend[11] of the Paston Family. In a letter to John Paston dated 1460, Lumnor invited his friend Paston to visit his new house if he was in the area.[12] In the same letter Lumnor asks Paston to supply him with Oak from the Paston estate to use on his new house at Mannington. In Nikolaus Pevsner’s[13] Buildings of England, North-east Norfolk and Norwich, he claims that a licence to crenellate was obtained by Lumnor in 1451. However this is incorrect, Mannington was never built under such a licence.[14] Lumnor had set several small guns on his battlements which he had constructed from stone and black knapped flint.[15] Inside the house on the wooden wall covering or wainscot he installed his family coat of arms of Lumner impaling Monivaux.[15] Lumnor completed the construction of the house by 1460. William Lumnor died around 1491. After the house being in the possession of several generations the Lumnor Family, they sold the house and estate to the Potts Family in 1585.

The Potts family

The Potts family came from Mannington for many generations over many years. Records show that in the year 1274 a man from Manningham called William Potts was sued by a William Tirrell for encroaching and appropriating to himself the fee of a certain highway extending from Mannington to the river Cam. When the hall came into the possession of John Potts he was a student in Lincoln's Inn and who became a lawyer of eminence and reputation. He was married to Anne Dogge daughter of John Dodge.[16] He died in 1600 and is buried in the parish church of Saint Mary[17] (Now in Ruins). John Potts son was also called John and was elected Member of Parliament for Norfolk in the Long Parliament.[18] He was Knighted[19] by King Charles I and was created a baronet by letters dated on the 14 August 1641. Despite Potts being knighted he was a staunch Parliamentarian. He became a great friend of Oliver Cromwell.[20] Cromwell visited Potts on numerous occasions whilst staying at the nearby Irmingland Hall, Oulton, the home of Lt General Charles Fleetwood. Despite Potts support for the Parliamentarian side during the Civil war he was eventually excluded from Parliament under Pride's Purge in 1648.Potts returned to Parliament in 1660 when he was elected MP for Great Yarmouth in the Convention Parliament.[18] During the 1720s the Potts family’s fortunes were ruined following the share collapse of the South Sea Company known as the South Sea Bubble. The Potts carried on living at Mannington hall until 1736[3] when the wife of Sir John Potts, Bart (died 1731) died in February 1736. Sir John had died without issue. Due to the Potts financial instabilities, the manor and township with the patronage was purchased for the sum of £20,000 by Horatio Walpole[3] who also owned the adjoining park and estate attached to Wolterton Hall.

The Walpoles

Horatio Walpole was the younger brother of Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford, who was a British statesman who is generally regarded as the first Prime Minister of Great Britain. Like his brother, Horatio was also a politician and diplomat, and spend time at the Hague and had also been the Ambassador of France in Paris between 1724 and 1730.[21] When Horatio purchased Mannington from the Potts he was in the process of building himself a new house at Wolterton and has been suggested[3] that the acquiring of the nearby estate of Mannington was to extend the Wolterton estate in to Mannington an to use the hall as a Dower house or possibly a farmhouse. Evidently it was the very low importance that Horatio placed on the hall and its lack of re-development that allowed to go virtually unaltered from the time of the Potts ownership.[3] Manninghton eventually became the main home to the Warpole’s when Horatio’s great great Grandson Horatio Walpole, 4th Earl of Orford inherited the two estates in 1858. Horatio the forth had an interest in antiquity and in gothic architecture and he also thought that Mannington would make a better family home than the grand and formal house at Wolterton. He moved to Mannington and began to make improvements and alteration immediately. During this period of renovation the house was elaborated with architectural features from other Walpole owned properties. The house and estate was passed on to Robert Horace Walpole who was the 5th and last Earl of Orford and he lived at Mannington from 1895 until 1905 when he moved back to Wolterton. Walpole let the house to the consulting dental surgeon Sir Charles Tomes,[3] and a Fellow of the Royal Society. During the First World War, Tomes was the chairman of the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital. He also published a book in 1916 called Mannington Hall and its owners which he wrote with the help of Robert Walpole.

1952 Listing

On the 20 February 1952 Mannington Hall was designated a Grade I listed building and it has the English Heritage List entry Number. 1001009.[22]

Robert Walpole

In 1931 the estates of Wolterton and Mannington were left to Robert Walpole the 7th Baron Walpole who was related to Robert Horace Walpole the fifth through the 1st Earl Orford. In 1969[3] his son, Robert Walpole, 10th Baron Walpole who took up residence in Mannington Hall once more and is still at Mannington.

Description

The hall is surrounded on all sides by a moat and in plan is oblong in shape with dimensions of 80.2 feet (24.4 m) by 40.0 feet (12.2 m) At the southern end of the house there are two polygonal angled towers with the south west tower being larger than the other. The smaller tower on the south east corner contains a staircase linking the three storeys of the hall. The main entrance to the hall is on the west elevation. This main door is reached by the use of a wood pedestrian drawbridge[23] with a wrought Iron Balustrade either side. The west elevation features a variety of sized mullioned windows with cusped tops. On the south elevation of the hall there are large mullioned windows. The eastern elevation incorporates the main body of the hall via a link building projecting west which according to Pevsner[24] was the kitchen. Link to this projection and running north there is a range of two storey brick and flint domestic and utility buildings with a set of four gable fronted dormer with mullioned windows. The north elevation faces a courtyard which is accessed via a Grade II listed bridge.[25] The courtyard is bordered to the east by the rear of the two storey domestic block. To the west of the courtyard is a Grade II listed wall[25] and a lower flint wall to the north. The main body of the hall is built using alternating courses of knapped flint and iron-stained flint with ashlar dressings. Many of the window mullions and revels are carved from the local carrstone which is found in the north west of Norfolk. The exterior walls of the hall are topped with crenulations or Battlements at the roofline. The roof is covered with Norfolk pantiles and has various chimneys which were added in the mid-19th century of which some have been salvaged from other Walpole properties.

Public access

Mannington Hall estate is open every day of the year for the public to use the country walks around the estate at no cost although there is a charge for the car park.[26][27] The gardens are open on a Sunday between 12 pm and 5 pm on Sundays between may and September. In June, July and August the gardens are also open on Thursday and Fridays between 11 am and 5 pm. The house is only open to the public by pre-arranged appointments and to special interest groups and on special events.[26]

References

  1. "Mannington Hall – Itteringham – Norfolk – England". Grade I listing details for Mannington Hall. British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  2. OS Explorer Map 252 - Norfolk Coast East. Ordnance Survey detailed Explorer Map (A3 ed.). Ordnance Survey. 2008-07-21. p. 1. ISBN 9780319240380.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Clarke, David (2006). The Country Houses of Norfolk – The Major Houses. Details and description of Mannington Hall. Geo. R. Reeve Ltd, Wymondham, Norfolk. p. 51. ISBN 9780900616761.
  4. Middleton, Christopher (15 September 2001). "When an Englishman's home is his business". The Daily Telegraph.
  5. "Mannington Gardens". manningtongardens.co.uk.
  6. James, Rye. A Popular Guide to Norfolk Place-names. Explanation of Mannington (Manninctuna), Norfolk. Larks press. p. 59. ISBN 0948400153.
  7. Hinde, Thomas. (1985). The Domesday Book, Englands Heritage, Then and Now. Reference to the Domesday entry for Mannington (1 ed.). Guild Publishing London. p. 192. ISBN 9781858334400.
  8. 1 2 General Editor:Morris, John (1086). Domesday Book – Norfolk (Part One). Land of the King – 132b, 133a (1984 ed.). Phillimore, Chichester. pp. 1–194. ISBN 9780850334791.
  9. General Editor:Morris, John (1086). Domesday Book – Norfolk (Part One). Land of William de Warenne (1984 ed.). Phillimore, Chichester. p. 8-8. ISBN 9780850334791.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Nevill, Lady Dorothy (1894). Mannington and the Walpoles, Earls of Orford. With ten illustrations of Mannington Hall, Norfolk. Reference to Maude Turell, Walter Hewell, and the Lumner family’s ownership of Mannington. Fine Art Society. p. 24.
  11. Davis, Norman (1983). The Paston Letters. Letter 14 – William Lomnor to John Paston I reference to Lomnor being a trusted agent to Paston. Oxford Paperbacks – Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780192816153.
  12. Richmond, Colin (31 Oct 1996). The Paston Family in the Fifteenth Century: Volume 2, Fastolf's Will. Reference to the letter and its invite to Paston and a request for timber for building materials. Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780521562386.
  13. Pevsner, Nikolaus (1976). Norfolk: Norwich and North-east v. 1 (Pevsner Architectural Guides: Buildings of England). Reference to crenellation of Mannington Hall. Penguin Books Ltd. p. 192 - section 1030. ISBN 9780300096071. ISBN No. for a later edition.
  14. Emery, Anthony (25 May 2000). Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, 1300-1500: Volume 2, East Anglia, Central England and Wales: East Anglia, Central England and Wales Vol 2. Mannington Hall – reference to the absence of crenellate licence. Oxford University Press. p. 123. ISBN 9780521581318.
  15. 1 2 Nevill, Lady Dorothy (1894). Mannington and the Walpoles, Earls of Orford. With ten illustrations of Mannington Hall, Norfolk. Reference to Lumner work on Mannington. Fine Art Society. p. 24.
  16. John Burke, John Bernard Burke A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies
  17. "St Mary, Mannington". Description of the church ruins. Norfolk Churches website. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  18. 1 2 History of Parliament Online - Potts, Sir John
  19. Knights of England
  20. Nevill, Lady Dorothy (1894). Mannington and the Walpoles, Earls of Orford. With ten illustrations of Mannington Hall, Norfolk. Reference to Potts friendship with Oliver Cromwell. Fine Art Society. p. 25.
  21. Clarke, David (2006). The Country Houses of Norfolk – The Major Houses. Reference to Horatio’s Political career. Geo. R. Reeve Ltd, Wymondham, Norfolk. p. 95. ISBN 9780900616761.
  22. "List Entry – Mannington Hall". Details of the English Heritage Listing of Mannington Hall. English Heritage. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  23. "Draw Bridge – Mannington Hall". Grade II listing details for the drawbridge to the west of the main door to Mannington Hall. British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  24. Pevsner, Nikolaus (1976). Norfolk: Norwich and North-east v. 1 (Pevsner Architectural Guides: Buildings of England). Line 18 - Reference to westward projecting Kitchen wing. Penguin Books Ltd. p. 192 - section 1030. ISBN 9780300096071. ISBN No. for a later edition.
  25. 1 2 "Walls to Garden and Moat, Bridge and Attached Gazebo and Arch at Mannington Hall". Grade II listing details for the Walls to Garden, Moat, Bridge and Attached Gazebo and Arch at Mannington Hall. British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  26. 1 2 Wolterton & Mannington – 2014. The Estates information leaflet and Events Calendar for 2014. Wolterton & Mannington – printed by Barnwell Press Ltd, Aylsham. 2014.
  27. "Wolterton & Mannington – 2014" (PDF). PDF of the Estates information leaflet and Events Calendar for 2014. Wolterton & Mannington – printed by Barnwell Press Ltd, Aylsham. Retrieved 20 August 2014.

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