Ditchley Park

Ditchley Park is a country house and estate near Charlbury in Oxfordshire, England. The estate was once the site of a Roman villa. Later it became a royal hunting ground, and then the property of Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley.

Ditchley House
Ditchley House, side view, 1880
Main door of Ditchley House

The 2nd Earl of Lichfield built the present house, designed by James Gibbs, in 1722. In 1933, the house was bought by an MP, Ronald Tree, whose wife Nancy Lancaster redecorated it in partnership with Sibyl Colefax. During the Second World War, they allowed their friend, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, to use the house as his country retreat, as it was hard to spot from the air. Later, Tree sold the house and estate to The 7th Earl of Wilton, who owned it briefly before selling in 1953 to Sir David Wills of the tobacco family, who set up the Ditchley Foundation, for the promotion of international relations.

History

Ditchley was a medieval village recorded between the 14th and 17th centuries. No trace of the deserted medieval village is now visible.[1] Ditchley once provided lodging and access to the royal hunting ground of Wychwood Forest.[2] In September 1603 James I dined with Sir Henry Lee at Ditchfield.[3] The present house was erected in 1722 for The 2nd Earl of Lichfield and was designed by James Gibbs. The fireplaces are by Edward Stanton and his partner Christopher Horsnaile.[4]

Occupants of the Ditchley estate have included:

He commissioned the Ditchley Portrait of Queen Elizabeth I,[5] which shows her standing on a map of the British Isles, surveying her dominions; one foot rests near Ditchley in Oxfordshire, to commemorate her visit to Sir Henry Lee there. He was later noted for declining to receive his monarch a second time, because of the enormous expense. King James VI and I and Anne of Denmark visited on 15 September 1603 with the French ambassador and a duke, who Arbella Stuart called the "Dutchkin."[6]

Tree family

In 1933, after the death of The 17th Viscount Dillon, an Anglo-Irish peer, Ditchley was bought by Anglo-American Ronald Tree and his wife, the celebrated decorator Nancy Lancaster. It was the decoration of Ditchley which earned Nancy the reputation of having "the finest taste of almost anyone in the world." She worked on it with Sibyl Colefax (Mrs Bethell of Elden Ltd having died in 1932) and the French decorator Stéphane Boudin of the Paris firm Jansen. In November 1933, Ronald was elected MP for Harborough, Leicestershire. Tree and his wife Nancy were among those who saw the Nazi threat, and had invited Winston Churchill and his wife to dinner on numerous occasions from 1937.

Churchill

Churchill bust

On the outbreak of war, the security forces were concerned by the visibility of both Churchill's country house, Chartwell – its high site, and its position south of London, making it an easy returning-home target for German aircraft – and the Prime Minister's official retreat of Chequers, which had an entrance road which was clearly visible from the sky when illuminated by moonlight. Churchill had use of the Paddock bunker in Neasden, but only used it on one occasion for a cabinet meeting before returning to his Cabinet War Room bunker in Whitehall. Ditchley, with its heavy foliage and lack of a visible access road, was an ideal site. Churchill asked Tree for "accommodation at Ditchley for certain weekends, when the moon is high" and he readily consented. Churchill first went to Ditchley in lieu of Chequers on 9 November 1940, accompanied by his wife Clementine and daughter Mary.[8] During visits to Ditchley, Churchill negotiated part of the Lend-Lease agreement with President Roosevelt's special advisor Harry Hopkins, and had exiled Czechoslovakian President Edvard Beneš as a guest.[9] By late 1942, security at Chequers had been improved, including covering the road with turf. The last weekend Churchill attended Ditchley as his official residence was Tree's birthday on 26 September 1942, and his final visit was for lunch in 1943.[10] In June 1994, US Secretary of State Warren Christopher and British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd unveiled a bronze bust of Churchill, which stands in a prominent position to highlight the role that Ditchley Park played during a critical phase of the Second World War.

Recent decades

Ditchley from the lake

Shortly after the end of the war, Tree divorced Nancy and married Marietta Peabody Fitzgerald, an American woman he had met while working for the Ministry of Information. Marietta moved into Ditchley, but found English country life not to her liking. Noticing his wife's upset, and short of money, Tree sold Ditchley to Sir David Wills, descendant of the tobacco importing family, W. D. & H. O. Wills of Bristol; and moved with his family and butler Collins to New York. In 1958 Wills set up a trust called the Ditchley Foundation, which aims to promote international (especially Anglo-American) relations, and which still owns the house today. Ditchley was used to film scenes from the first episode of the final series of Downton Abbey.[11] In 2002, it became the home of the Butler Valet School.[12]

Archaeology

There are remains of a Roman villa on the Ditchley Park estate at Watts Wells, less than 1 mile (1.6 km) southeast of the house.[13] It was a colonnaded house with outbuildings, threshing floors, and a granary with capacity for the produce of about 1,000 acres (400 ha) of arable land.[14] It was surrounded by a rectangular ditch 360 yards (330 m) by 330 yards (300 m).[15] The site is less than 2 miles (3.2 km) north of the course of Akeman Street Roman road, and is one of a number of Roman villas and Romano-British farmsteads that have been identified in the area,[16] apparently associated with the territory bounded by Grim's Ditch.[17]

The villa site was identified by aerial archaeology in 1934 and excavated in 1935.[18] It was found to have been first settled in about AD 70 with a set of timber-framed buildings, which were replaced in stone in the 2nd century.[18] In about AD 200 a fire severely damaged the stone buildings and the site was abandoned.[18] The site was reoccupied early in the 4th century, and occupation on a more modest scale than before continued until the end of that century.[18]

Some time before the villa was discovered and excavated, a hoard of 1,176 bronze Roman coins was found between Box Wood and Out Wood, about 600 yards (550 m) to 700 yards (640 m) northeast of the villa site.[19] The coins range in date from about AD 270 onwards and seem to have been buried in a ceramic pot about AD 395, towards the end of the Roman occupation.[20] The hoard was transferred to the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford in 1935.[19]

Grim's Ditch, which passes through the present park and estate, is an ancient boundary believed to have been constructed during the Roman occupation of Britain in about the 1st century AD.[21] The toponym "Ditchley" is derived from a compound of two Old English words, meaning the woodland clearing ("-ley") on Grim's Ditch.

See also

References

  1. Historic England. "Ditchley (334955)". PastScape. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  2. "The Ditchley Foundation". Archived from the original on 4 April 2007.
  3. "Tudorplace.com".
  4. Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Rupert Gunnis
  5. Dr Sue Simpson (28 December 2014). Sir Henry Lee (1533–1611): Elizabethan Courtier. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 119–. ISBN 978-1-4724-3741-9.
  6. Edmund Lodge, Illustrations of British History, vol. 3 (London, 1838), p. 26: Sara Jayne Steen, Letters of Lady Arbella Stuart (Oxford, 1994), p. 182.
  7. Wood, Martin (2005). Nancy Lancaster: English Country House Style. Frances Lincoln Ltd. pp. 85 and 190.
  8. Jackson, Ashley (October 2014). "Winston Churchill, Oxfordshire, and Ditchley Park". The International Churchill Society. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
  9. Winston Churchill Archived 14 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  10. History Lives at Ditchley and Bletchley – The Churchill Centre Archived 16 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  11. http://www.ditchley.co.uk/news/post/162-downton-at-ditchley
  12. http://www.butler-valetschool.co.uk/
  13. Sherwood & Pevsner, 1974, page 576
  14. Emery, 1974, page 44
  15. Riley, 1943, page 87
  16. Emery, 1974, pages 41–45
  17. Booth, 1999, pages 47–48
  18. Booth, 1999, page 41
  19. Sutherland, 1936, page 70
  20. Sutherland, 1936, page 71
  21. Copeland, 1988, page 287

Sources

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