Sulgrave
Manor's Gardens
H. Clifford Smith, in his authoritative study of 'Sulgrave
Manor and the Washingtons', eloquently describes the
beginnings of the present gardens.
The Farmyard as it was at the
time of purchase.
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"When the Manor House was bought in 1914 all trace
of the original flower-garden and pleasaunce of Elizabethan
days had disappeared. For no less than a hundred and
fifty years the house had been merely a farm homestead,
barns and sheds had been built on one side, while elsewhere,
save for a small kitchen garden, rough paddocks had
encroached to the very walls of the ancient building,
and a pig-sty rested against one side of the Elizabethan
porch.
"Piece by piece, as funds allowed, beginning in
1920 and running concurrently with the work indoors,
the re-making of the garden and orchard was undertaken.
Like the restoration of the house, the laying out of
the whole of the grounds was entrusted to Sir Reginald
Blomfield, a recognised authority on the planning of
the English formal garden, and gradually a rose garden,
herb and flower borders, a grass terrace, lawn and bowling
green, an orchard, and thick hedges of close-clipped
yew came into being - the right and proper setting for
a Tudor dwelling."

The house before the second stage
of garden work. |
As within the house, the garden restoration was undertaken
through donations in both cash and kind. Mrs. James
H Dorsey, Vice-Chairman of the National Society of the
Daughters of the American Revolution, for example, sent
over an offshoot of the elm tree at Cambridge Massachusetts
under which George Washington stood when he took command
of the American army. The 'Washington Elm' prospered,
reaching eight feet high by 1932 but still with a way
to go to match, at eighty to ninety feet, the remaining
two ancient elms of a once large grove in Little Green,
believed to be that mentioned by Washington Irving in
his Life of George Washington as the roost for the rooks
that even then were 'hovering and cawing' as they do
today. Alas, the elms here, as throughout England, are
no longer.
But another significant gift from Mrs Gilmer S. Adams
in memory of her husband, the Sundial which was unveiled
by Mrs Joseph Lemar in 1925, still stands as the focal
point of the Rose Garden at the east side of the House.
The dial's ancient square brass plate is engraved with
a Tudor rose from which the hour lines radiate. Beneath
this are cut the initials G.N. and a standing deer hound
with the date 1579.
The Rose Garden retains its traditional geometric design
and is gradually being replanted with roses. The Sulgrave
Millenium rose now fills the central beds and a recent
donation from Mrs Linda Williams has enabled us to begin
replanting the other beds. The box hedges which create
the design are being cut back to their original size and
replanted where necessary. The Rose Garden now has herbaceous
borders to the north and south but originally these were
beds of lavender. Queen Mary and the Princess Royal accepted
a gift from the first year's lavender crop in 1921 during
their visit and from then on, hundreds of bags of lavender
were sold to visitors.

The National Garden of the Herb
Society. |
Beyond the Rose Garden steps lead down to what was, in
Blomfield's design of the 1920s, the Rock, Herb and Kitchen
Garden. The new century marked the redesign of the area
to incorporate the National
Garden of the Herb Society which celebrates the American
link by containing beds dedicated to herbs taken to the
Americas and those introduced to Britain from the Americas
as well as beds of general culinary and medicinal herbs.
The area under the care of the Herb Society has recently
been extended a little and work is proceeding to create
a 'Magic Garden' for children. For many years, visitors
had to retrace their steps from the Herb Garden back along
the Rose Garden but in 2006 a new path was created to
the north and south connecting the Herb Garden with the
Orchard to the south and with an area newly taken into
cultivation which will become the Washington Garden to
the north.
The Orchard may well have been an orchard since the days
when the estate was owned by the monks of St Andrew's
Priory in Northampton. At the time of the 1920s restoration,
there were a few apple trees of great age. Two of them,
both more than 6 feet in girth, were still bearing fruit
- a 'Hanwell Souring', one of the finest cooking apples
known in the Midlands, and an 'Annie Elizabeth, one of
the best dessert apples. Apart from these few fruit trees
the acre of ground had remained a rough field until 1927
when it was decided to lay it out as an orchard once again,
making it a definite part of the pleasure garden as was
the custom in Tudor times. To this end, the apple trees
were chosen as much for the beauty of their blossom as
for the quality of their fruit and under-planted with
spring time masses of daffodils, narcissi, jacinths, muscari,
snowdrops and crocuses.
While the Hanwell Souring and the Annie Elizabeth are
long gone, 'King Lod' remains, a very early 'Loddington',
possibly the oldest in the country and certainly the oldest
apple tree in Northampton.
There is a wooden bench at the end of the orchard commanding
a direct view of the house and it commemorates the short
life of Thomas Sherrerd, 1908 -1924, whose parents gave
the orchard to the Manor in his memory. His mother, Mary
Eva Moore Sherrerd was the President of the Colonial Dames
of New Jersey.
Between the orchard and the house stretch the lawns replacing
a pasture meadow where cattle grazed. A path of small
stepping stones through the lawns was replaced in the
1990s with a broader gravel path ending, as the stepping
stones had done, at two examples of topiary work, birds
standing on broad bases in clipped yew. The 'bird' on
the left was planted in 1924 by President Taft and that
on the right by Ambassador Harvey. Over the decades, their
shape had been obscured and they have been cut back this
year in an attempt to rediscover the original birds.
The Plan of the Gardens in 1932.
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The work of the 1920s created the gardens to the front
and east of the house but the area to the west remained
part of the adjoining pasture, Madam's Close. Part of
the Close was incorporated into the gardens but left
to grass, known as 'the Paddock', as it still is, and
trees added.
The major change came with the Courtyard Project, completed
in 1999, which created the splendid range of modern
buildings. Taking advantage of the fall of the land,
a terrace garden was created leading from the Hall up
to the Paddock and the path alongside the hall improved
and another border added.

The terrace garden in 1999
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and in 2007
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Some years ago, re-enactors built a forge at the top of
the Paddock as part of a special event. This has been
resurrected in the last couple of years and is now actively
used by the Schools Programme to draw attention to the
normal living standards in Tudor England. It attracts
the interest of many adult visitors as well and serves
as a reminder to all that not everyone in Tudor England
lived in manor houses.
Last year the top of the Paddock was redesigned as a Children's
Garden with a play area and living willow structures.
The work continues : to stay true to the founders' vision
of the garden and also to provide visitors, both child
and adult with a worthy extension of their experience
at the Manor.
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