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Woolsington Park

Introduction

Woolsington Hall has an associated landscaped park and pleasure grounds.

The following is from the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest. For the most up-to-date Register entry, please visit The National Heritage List for England (NHLE):

A late 18th-/early 19th-century landscape park and pleasure grounds providing the setting for a 17th-century and later country house.

Location, Area, Boundaries, Landform and Setting

Woolsington Hall stands just beyond the north-west edge of Newcastle upon Tyne's outer housing estates, west of Gosforth, at the south-east boundary of Newcastle Airport. The c 120 ha site is bounded largely by agricultural land, with the south-west boundary marked by C20 housing occupying the former south-west corner of the parkland, and beyond this the A696 Ponteland Road which runs through the village of Woolsington. The north boundary and the remains of the C19 west boundary are marked by Middle Drive which forks off the A696 900m south-west of the Hall.

Entrances and Approaches

At the southern tip of the park the south drive enters off Ponteland Road, 1.3 km south of the Hall. The entrance is marked by a lodge, accompanied by a pair of early C19 gate piers and walls (listed grade II), through which the main drive leads directly north, across the centre of the park, to approach the south front of the Hall. There is also a pair of cast-iron gas lamps from the early C19 (listed grade II). A longer route was provided by a ride which led through South Lodge Plantation, across a stone bridge over the waterfall at the east end of the lake, along the eastern edge of the park, through into the pleasure grounds east of the Hall (Plan of Woolsington Township).

A second lodge, Bee Croft, stands outside the area here registered, to the north of Woolsington Bridge, 900 m south-west of the Hall, where the A696 forks on its way northwards, the eastern branch, Middle Drive, forming the western boundary of the park before turning due east to form the northern boundary.

A further entrance, now the main entrance, lies 100m to the north-west of the Hall, between it and the kitchen garden.

Principal Building

Woolsington Hall (listed grade II*) stands at the northern end of the site and possibly occupies the site of the medieval village of Wulsingtona. The Hall dates from the late C17, and may have been built by the Errington family of Ponteland. In 1748 it was bought by Mathew Bell. The wings are additions of the late C18 and early C19, John Dobson having worked on improvements in 1828. To the north-east is an early C19 wing (listed grade II), incorporated into the Hall. Stables and a coach house (late C19, listed grade II) stand to the north of the Hall.

Gardens and Pleasure Grounds

To the east of the Hall, and also facing south, is an orangery (listed grade II) dated 1797 on a rainwater head. Lawns below the south front are separated from the park by a ha-ha; on them stands a revolving summerhouse (early/mid C20). This is the site of gardens shown on John Robertson's map of 1727, which shows a formal scheme to the south and east of the Hall. Mature trees now form screens to the west and east of the south lawn.

The main area of pleasure grounds lies to the west of the Hall, a gravelled walk passing through a low ornamental fence into the formal gardens which lie to the south of the kitchen garden. A long walk runs parallel to the kitchen garden wall, at the eastern end of which is a small paved garden. At the centre of the garden, box hedges trace a pattern of formal beds, the focus of which is an iron-work rose-arbour and circular seat. Some of the decorative ironwork fences which divided up the garden survive, but the sundial shown on the 1st edition OS map of 1861 has gone. The south-west corner of the garden area is occupied by a tennis court and accompanying pavilion put in presumably early this (C20) century and probably contemporary with the adjacent area of rockwork.

Kitchen Garden

The brick-walled kitchen garden stands 150 m west of the Hall, set within a plantation. At the centre of the garden is an artesian well, pool and pump, and a number of trained fruit trees survive. A range of glass lines the north wall, on the outer, north side of which is a row of bothies and potting sheds; a gardener's house stands just outside the north-east corner of the garden.

Park

The park, the layout of which remains much as in the early C19 (Plan of Woolsington Township), is encircled by a broad shelter belt through which run the west and east rides. A strip of housing has encroached into the western shelter belt, and a small housing estate now occupies the south-west corner of the site. The park, now partly under arable cultivation, is planted with a number of large clumps. It contains several standing stones in the eastern half.

A lake lying 800 m south of the Hall, and at least in part stone-edged, divides the southern third of the park from the northern two-thirds. The feature is formed by the damming of the Ouse Burn which runs from west to east across the site, from Woolsington Bridge to the weir and waterfall which are located some 900 m south-east of the Hall in the eastern shelter belt, at the north end of South Lodge Plantation. At the centre-point of the lake, where it is crossed by the line of the south drive, is the site of a boathouse. Some 150m to the north-east of the dam is a Bath House, and 100 m to the east of this structure is the site of the icehouse.

Maps

  • J Robertson, A Plan ... of Woolsington, 1727 (Northumberland Record Office)
  • Plan of Woolsington Estate, 1744 (private collection)
  • Armstrong, A Plan of Northumberland, 1769 (Northumberland Record Office)
  • Plan of Woolsington Township, early 19th century (Northumberland Record Office)
  • OS 6" to 1 mile: 1st edition published 1861
  • OS 25" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published 1897

Description written: November 1999

Edited: September 2000

Visitor Access, Directions & Contacts
History

The following is from the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest. For the most up-to-date Register entry, please visit The National Heritage List for England (NHLE):

17th and 18th Century

John Robertson's map (1727) shows a formal garden to the south and east of the late 17th-century Woolsington Hall. A central path ran from the Hall past formal beds to a pair of gates on the south boundary of the garden, which projected slightly into a field to the south which was enclosed by a line of trees. West the Hall stood a grove of trees, with an orchard of fruit trees planted to the north-east in a kitchen garden. Armstrong (1769) shows the Hall approached from the west, standing within a compact, rectangular enclosure with no parkland indicated.

19th Century

By the early 19th century (Plan of Woolsington Township) wings had been added to the Hall which stood at the southern edge of a belt of pleasure ground, part of a landscape park laid out during the late 18th or early 19th century. At that time the Hall overlooked the park, which was planted with clumps of trees and enclosed by a perimeter belt of trees, and led south to a lake, formed from the Ouse Burn. Since then the landscape has been little altered (1999), with the exception of a 20th-century development of houses which has been inserted at the south-west corner of the park, extending north along the west boundary.

Period

  • 18th Century (1701 to 1800)
  • Late 18th Century (1775 to 1799)
Associated People
Features & Designations

Designations

  • The National Heritage List for England: Register of Parks and Gardens

  • Reference: GD2393
  • Grade: II
  • The National Heritage List for England: Listed Building

  • Reference: early C19 wing
  • Grade: II
  • The National Heritage List for England: Listed Building

  • Reference: The Hall
  • Grade: II*

Features

  • Orangery
  • Stable Block
  • Description: Stables and coach house. late C19, listed grade II)
  • Gate Piers
  • Description: Early-19th-century gate piers and walls. Also a pair of cast iron gas lamps.
  • Earliest Date:
  • Latest Date:
  • Hall (featured building)
  • Description: Woolsington Hall, listed grade II*, C17,
  • Latest Date:
  • Parkland
  • Description: Park, the layout of which remains much as in the early C19 (Plan of Woolsington Township),
  • Lake
  • Description: A lake lying 800m south of the Hall, formed by the damming of the Ouse Burn
  • Kitchen Garden
  • Description: Brick-walled kitchen garden with an artesian well, pool and pump,
  • Boat House
  • Bath House
  • Lodge
  • Description: one at the southern tip of the park and another (Bee Croft) to the north of Woolsington Bridge, south-west of the Hall
  • Icehouse
Key Information

Type

Park

Purpose

Ornamental

Principal Building

Domestic / Residential

Period

18th Century (1701 to 1800)

Survival

Part: standing remains

Hectares

120

Civil Parish

Woolsington

References

References