Mirehouse

Mirehouse

Mirehouse is a 17th-century house to the north of Keswick in Cumbria, at the foot of Dodd, near Bassenthwaite Lake and St Bega's Church, on the A591 road. Although still a family home it and its grounds are open to the public and in 1999 won the award for 'Best Heritage Property for Families in the UK'.

Mirehouse was built in 1666 by Charles Stanley, 8th Earl of Derby, who sold it in 1688 to his agent, Roger Greg. The Greg family and then the Storys owned the estate until 1802 when it was given by Thomas Story to John Spedding. The Spedding family have owned Mirehouse ever since.

The Speddings have enlarged the house several times, with the last major changes occurring in the 1960s, when extensive renovation work was carried out, and in the 1980s, when the ground floor and grounds were opened to the public. The grounds now include a Bee Garden, a wild flower meadow, a "poetry walk" and adventure playgrounds.

The Spedding family had strong links to a number of poets, including William Wordsworth, Lord Alfred Tennyson and Robert Southey as well as Thomas Carlyle and John Constable, some of whom stayed at Mirehouse. In celebration of these poetic links, an annual Poetry competition is now held.

In Whitehaven, also in Cumbria, there is a large housing estate called Mirehouse. The population of the associated electoral ward was 4,498 at the 2011 census.[1]

References

  1. "Whitehaven ward population 2011". Retrieved 16 June 2015.

External links

Coordinates: 54°38′41″N 3°11′30″W / 54.6446°N 3.1916°W / 54.6446; -3.1916


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