This week I visited Basildon Park in Berkshire. Basildon is
a stunning late 18th century country house in the Palladian style
with fashionable Adam interiors. It was built between 1776 and 1783 for Sir
Francis Sykes, a nabob who had made his money in the East India Company and
wanted to have a country house that reflected his wealth and grandeur. Basildon
isn’t huge and has quite an intimate atmosphere and it is absolutely gorgeously
decorated. All the reception rooms are
designed to impress the visitor, from the entrance up a double flight of steps
into the central hall, to the grand staircase lit from above, to the octagonal
drawing room and long, pillared dining room. Basildon Park was the location for filming the Netherfield
scenes in Pride and Prejudice and visiting it gave me a
fine idea of what a grand country house would look like and also feel like to
visit as a guest in the early 19th century.
Something I learned about Basildon Park from my visit was
that it was part of a group of properties referred to as “the English
Hindoostan” because so many of Sykes’ fellow nabobs lived in the vicinity,
having either built or acquired properties in the area. One of the reasons for
this was that the nabobs were an isolated group, disliked for their wealth and
their nouveau riche lifestyle, and so they tended to gravitate towards one
another socially and lived in the same geographical area. In Berkshire there
were at least 30 houses associated with nabobs. Of these the most famous was
Warren Hastings, Governor-General of India, who lived at Purley Hall. Another, General
Richard Smith of Chilton Foliat, was said to epitomise everything the Ton
disliked about nabobs. He was loud, pretentious, arrogant, extreme in his
politics, extravagant and a shocking gambler.
Other notorious nabobs in the area included Thomas “Diamond”
Pitt, grandfather of William Pitt who lived at Swallowfield. He gained his
nickname from his habit of collecting enormous diamonds, one of which, The
Regent’s Diamond, was sold to the Duke of Orleans, added to the French Crown and
is now in the Louvre. It was valued at
almost half a million pounds in 1791.
At Caversham Park, where I also visited this week, the
landowner Major Charles Marsack was the illegitimate grandson of King George II
and at Foxley’s Manor in Bray there was Henry Vansittart, Governor of Bengal,
who was involved in the famous Hellfire Club of Medmenham Abbey. All these
extraordinary characters are rich inspiration for a writer! On a final literary
note: Bill Sikes in Oliver Twist was rumoured to be based on the character of
Sir Francis Sykes’ grandson!
Nicola Cornick
8 comments:
What fascinating places you visit, Nicola. I'd never heard of any of the houses you mentioned, and they're going on my 'must see' list at once!
Thanks, Elizabeth! Basildon Park is National Trust and well worth seeing. I'm not sure how many of the others are open to the public apart from Caversham, which is open on Heritage Open Days. I must admit to some curiosity to see the other "nabob" houses and see if they are as opulent as Basildon!
This was indeed interesting. Thanks for sharing. I love visiting various homes and seeing the decor, design and such. Obviously you and I share this interest. Houses play a very important place in history.
I love your posts, Nicola, always full of new and interesting information! Like Elizabeth I have made a note to visit Basildon now. We tend to forget the nabobs when writing about the 18th century, but they brought a grat deal of new wealth into the country. And the Ton's accusations about Richard Smith (arrogant, extravagant, gambler etc.) hmm pot calling the kettle black, I fear.....
Thanks, Gladys! I think houses really can open such a window into the history of the period in lots of different ways. I loved that the bedrooms as Basildon were less opulent because the house was mainly used for balls and dinners and so most guests wouldn't get to see upstairs!
Yes, so funny that the Ton criticised Richard Smith, Sarah! Of course all of those attributes would have been quite acceptable had he been a gentleman not a nabob! The snobbery was atonishing. And they were quite happy to marry the money...
Basildon looks gorgeous, just the sort of house I would like! Well, I can dream ... :)
LOL, Christina, I felt much the same. I could just see myself strolling through those lovely rooms and settling down to read in the library!
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