51.1467°N -0.6808°W Witley Park, formerly known as Lea Park, is an estate dating from the late 19th century between Godalming and Haslemere in Surrey, England. Its landscaped grounds include three artificial lakes, one of which conceals an underwater conservatory and smoking room. The mansion house, rebuilt for the swindler Whitaker Wright, was gutted by fire in October 1952 and the ruins were demolished in January 1954. In the early 21st century, a new house was built on the site.
At its height, under Wright's ownership at the start of the 20th century, the estate covered 9000acres. Following his death in 1904, it was sold and became increasingly fragmented. Much of Hindhead Common, Witley Common and Thursley Common was bought by local residents and presented to the National Trust in December 1905.
In the medieval and early modern periods, Witley Park was part of the manor of Witley. At the time of Domesday Book, it was held by Gislebert (Gilbert), son of Richere de L'Aigle.[1] It became the property of the Crown during the reign of Edward I (12721307). It was sold to Philip Carteret Webb in 1763 and remained in his family until the late 19th century.
Lea Park, as it was known at the time, was purchased in 1878 by William Henry Stone, the former MP for Portsmouth, for £47,000.[2] [3] Stone commissioned the architect, Richard William Drew, to design a 25-bedroom Queen Anne-style mansion house, which was completed in 1881.[4] [5] The estate was again offered for sale in 1892[5] and was purchased for £26,000 by Colonel Davison of Stow-on-the-Wold the following year.[6]
In 1896, the swindler Whitaker Wright purchased Lea Park and the adjacent South Park Farm. The title to the estate included the titular Lordship of the Manor and control of Hindhead Common and the Devil's Punch Bowl, amounting to a total of around 9000acres. Wright commissioned the architect, H. Paxton-Watson, to remodel the existing mansion, adding two wings to increase the number of bedrooms to 32. He constructed a wall to enclose the closest to the house and landscaped the grounds by building three artificial lakes. Wright committed suicide immediately after his conviction for fraud on 26 January 1904[7] and his properties were auctioned off. Much of Hindhead Common, Witley Common and Thursley Common was purchased by a committee of local residents and passed to the National Trust on 30 December 1905.[8]
William Pirrie, 1st Viscount Pirrie bought Lea Park in 1909.[9] He changed the name to "Witley Park" and added several hundred acres of land to the estate, purchased from Edward Stanley, 17th Earl of Derby.[10] Pirrie died without an heir in July 1924[9] and the estate was then owned by Sir John Leigh, 1st Baronet, MP for Clapham, from August 1924 to 1951.[11] [12]
The estate was bought in early 1952 by Ronald Huggett,[13] who immediately sold around half of the land, retaining around .[14] That October, the mansion was severely damaged by fire[13] and was subsequently demolished in January 1954.[15] In 1955, Huggett sold the remaining part of the estate to Gerald Bentall.[16] Bentall farmed much of the land and commissioned Patrick Gwynne to build the five-bedroom, Modern movement Witley Park House in the early 1960s.[17] [18]
In 1982 the estate, now comprising some 1,300 acres, was purchased by Sir Raymond and Lady Brown. Raymond Brown died in 1991[19] and, in 2002, his family sold the 450 acres of walled-off parkland, gate lodges and cottages, retaining Witley Park Farm to the south. Permission for a new house on the site of the old mansion was granted around 2004 and the house is now completed.
The core of Whitaker Wright's Lea Park mansion was designed by the architect, Richard William Drew, for William Henry Stone. Completed in 1881, the half-timbered house was built in the Queen Anne style, and had 25 bedrooms.[4] [5] Wright commissioned H. Paxton-Watson to add two new wings, built of Bargate stone, to the existing structure.[15] When completed, the house had seven reception rooms and 32 bedrooms. The decoration was lavish and upstairs rooms had moulded ceilings, oriental carpets, Chinese furniture and Japanese silk pictures. The largest ground floor room was the ballroom, which had a floor area of, an oak and walnut dance floor, crystal chandeliers and a theatre stage at one end.
At the end of the west wing was a glass-domed conservatory with walls built of Bath stone and at the opposite site of the building, at the end of the east wing was a copper-roofed observatory. The main dining room was and the kitchens were able to cater for up to 400 people. Other ground-floor rooms included a billiards room, a small private hospital and a velodrome. The cellars included underground strongrooms for storing valuable furniture and works of art.
The house was gutted by fire in October 1952[13] and the ruins were demolished in January 1954.[15]
When Whitaker Wright bought Lea Park, there were already two ornamental ponds, formed by damming a small tributary of the River Wey. He re-landscaped the grounds, to create three much larger lakes, adorned with statues and fountains, one of which, in the shape of a dolphin's head, is carved from Italian marble. Beneath the largest lake, now known as Thursley Lake, is an underwater conservatory and smoking room, connected to the shore by glazed tunnel and accessed via a stone staircase. Above the conservatory is a statue of Neptune, which appears to float on the surface of the water. The glass structures were constructed before the lake was filled and a reinforced with iron rings, of an identical design to those used on the Metropolitan line of the London Underground. The conservatory may have been in part designed by the civil engineer, Herbert Bartlett, responsible for constructing the Bakerloo line.
Also still standing in the grounds of Lea Park is a boathouse, with double wooden gates opening directly out onto Thursley Lake. Adjacent to Stable Lake is a bathing pavilion, designed in 1897 by Edwin Lutyens. Separating Stable and Thursley Lakes, is a weir with a bridge above, thought to have been designed by Paxton-Watson.
The Tudor-style stable block, also designed by Paxton-Watson for Wright, still stands to the northeast of the site of the mansion. Built in sandstone, it was capable of housing 50 horses and was centrally heated.
Four lodges, designed by Paxton-Watson, survive at the former entrances to the estate. They are: Brook Lodge, Milford Lodge, Thursley Lodge and Ormiston Lodge.