Buckwell Place Herstmonceux, England

Listed Building Data

Buckwell Place has been designated a Grade II* listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1043143
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
II*
Date Listed
12 August 1981
Name
BUCKWELL PLACE
Location
BUCKWELL PLACE, HAILSHAM ROAD
Parish
Herstmonceux
District
Wealden
County
East Sussex
Grid Reference
TQ 62659 12008
Easting
562659.3040
Northing
112008.3560

Description

Large former rectory, now private house. Original wing of c1792 built by the Rev.Robert Hare, a member of the Hare family who owned Herstmonceux Castle. His nephew Archdeacon Julius Hare added a parlour wing with best bedroom above the southwest in 1833 with contemporary conservatory in the L wing.

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

HERSTMONCEUX HAILSHAM ROAD TQ 61 SW

13/414 Buckwell Place

II

The entry and grade shall be amended to read;

TQ 61 SW HERSTMONCEUX HAILSHAM ROAD

13/414 Buckwell Place

II* (star)

Large former rectory, now private house. Original wing of c1792 built by the Rev.Robert Hare, a member of the Hare family who owned Herstmonceux Castle. His nephew Archdeacon Julius Hare added a parlour wing with best bedroom above the southwest in 1833 with contemporary conservatory in the L wing. c1860 a service wing was added to the west by the Rev Henry Wellesley, an illegitimate nephew of the Duke of Wellington. Stuccoed with hipped slate roof and stuccoed chimney stacks. NE or entrance front of original wing has 2 storeys 4 windows. 4 12-pane sashes to first floor (the third a blank with slate partition behind) and 3 curved blank panels to ground floor and curved recessed doorcase with Gibbs surround. Garden front to SE has 4 12- pane sashes (the third on first floor blank with slate partition behind). The rear elevation of this wing has 3 storeys with 6 pane sashes to second floor, 12 pane sashes to lower floors and round- headed staircase window on right hand side. SW elevation has 1 blank window. Attached to the south west is the 1833 parlour wing of 1 bay with balcony to first floor and canted bay with French windows to ground floor. Attached to west is 2 storey wing of c1860 in matching style with tripartite windows to ground floor. The principal feature of the house is a domed conservatory of c1833 built between the original wing and the parlour wing of 1833. This has thin iron ribs with small panes of curved glass and circular cast iron ventilation slits with iron urn finial on a stuccoed base approached up 3 tooled stone steps. Original library, now lounge, has c1830 marble fireplace surround with reeded pilasters and roundels and door with marginal glazing. Curved late C18 staircase with mahogany handrail and 6 panelled door nearby. Old kitchen has wooden segmental fireplace with central keystone, iron crane and Eagle cast iron range. Cellar has stone staircase with iron handrail and wine bins of c1833 in tooled stone niches. Dining Room has some possibly C18 chinese wallpaper, but this is not original to the house. The house has historic interest as being the childhood home of Augustus Hare the notable Victorian travel writer who also wrote memoirs in 6 volumes 'The story of my life'. Augustus Hare was brought up by his uncle, Archdeacon Julius Hare whose library was famous and who entertained many eminent victorians including Thomas Carlyle. The library and pictures which he collected were subsequently bequeathed to the University of Oxford. [See Augustus Hare 'The Story of my Life', Vols I-VI].


HERSTMONCEUX HAILSHAM ROAD 1. 5208 Buckwell Place TQ 61 SW 13/414

II

  1. L-shaped. Early C19 house built by the Reverend Robert Hare, the drawing-room on the south side and the room over added by his nephew, Archdeacon Julius Hare, in 1833. Two storeys. Four windows. Stuccoed. Hipped slate roof. Glazing bars intact. Wide rusticated doorway with segmental fanlight, side lights and double doors of 6 fielded panels. Domed conservatory in the angle of the L. Part of the childhood of Augustus John Cuthbert Hare (1834-1903) (nephew of Archdeacon Hare) the author, water colour artist, book and art collector was spent here.

Listing NGR: TQ6262312017