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Wotton House, Surrey

Country house in Wotton, Surrey, England

Wotton House, Surrey

Country house in Wotton, Surrey, England

FieldValue
nameWotton House
imageFile:(C) Hayley Bray (4).jpg
captionWotton House north side main entrance
typeCountry house
locmapinSurrey
coordinates
locationGuildford Road, Wotton, Surrey
area20 ha
built17th century
ownerInterContinental Hotels Group
designation1Grade II*
designation1_offnameWotton House
designation1_date11 March 1987
designation1_number
designation2National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens
designation2_offnameWotton House
designation2_date1 June 1984
designation2_number
designation3Grade II
designation3_offnameWaterwork grotto to south west of Wotton House
designation3_date11 March 1987
designation3_number
designation4Grade II
designation4_offnameGrotto to east of Wotton House
designation4_date11 March 1987
designation4_number

Wotton House is a hotel, wedding venue, conference centre and former country house in Wotton near Dorking, Surrey, England. Originally the centre of the Wotton Estate and the seat of the Evelyn family, it was the birthplace in 1620 of diarist and landscape gardener John Evelyn, who built the first Italian garden in England there.

Wotton House North Side
Wotton house from the SE

The garden on the south side is of several acres, and can be walked, including up steps to near the top of the hill.

Construction

George Evelyn bought Wotton from Henry Owen, a descendant of Owen Tudor, in 1579. The house was built in the early 17th century by the Evelyn family who extended it in the later 17th century. In the 18th century it was extended eastwards by William Kent. Further extensions and alterations were made in the early 19th century by Francis Edwards. Following a fire in the 1870s the house was restored and enlarged by Henry Woodyer for William John Evelyn in 1877.

Its architectural features include distinctive terracotta decorations on brickwork, octagonal turrets and stacks, winged gryphons on the porch, and plaster wall panels by Kent painted in Chinese style by Belgian Jean Derraux. The old orangery (now the centre's bar), has a decorative parapet and banded piers. Many of the doors feature small paintings above them.

The estate

Wotton House, South side showing terraced gardens, 2003

John Evelyn (1620–1706) and his elder brother George created the first Italian garden in England. Work on it started in 1643, was completed by 1652, and it is the house's most famous feature.

The River Tillingbourne flows through the estate, which had its own mill at one time. The mill was originally used for the manufacture of gunpowder, a major source of the family's fortune. Later the mill was adapted for use as a wire-works and copper mill.

Notable residents

Wotton House was the family seat of the Evelyn Family. John Evelyn, the diarist, landscape designer and collector, was born in a room still in existence there. He inherited the house and estates on the death of his brother George in 1699.

The descendants who inherited the house in turn included Conservative politician William John Evelyn (1822-1908), who was elected MP for Western Surrey from 1849 until 1857 and became MP for Deptford in 1885 until resigning in 1888.

Post-war use

Between 1947 and 1981 the house was leased to the Home Office and used as the Fire Service College.

Grade II* listed status was given to the garden in 1984, and the house and its two garden grottoes became listed in 1987.

Twenty-first century

Wotton House being used as a wedding venue

In 2003, having been fully refurbished following a period of relative neglect, Wotton House was re-opened as a hotel, wedding venue, training and conference centre.

The property is currently owned and run by InterContinental Hotels Group. It has several conference suites, an indoor swimming pool and athletic centre. A large church-style structure on the north side can be used for ceremonial events such as weddings.

Notes

References

References

  1. "At Wotton on his brother's estate he and a relation George Evelyn introduced between 1643 and 1652 what was really the first Italian garden into England, terracing a steep hillside and fitting a little temple into the bottom of it." {{harv. Nairn. Pevsner. Cherry. 1971
  2. Edward Wedlake Brayley, John Britton, Edward William Brayley, ''Topographical History of Surrey'', vol. 5 (London, 1850), p. 20.
  3. {{NHLE
  4. The grounds are unusually highly listed as Grade II* and there are also two [[grotto]]es close to the house, both listed Grade II.{{NHLE| num=1000391|access-date=7 May 2012}}
  5. {{NHLE
  6. {{NHLE
  7. (2016). "Tillingbourne Trails, Wotton".
  8. "Wotton_Bro_use". Principal Hayley.
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