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Sizergh Castle and Garden

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+44 15395 60951

Sizergh Castle and Garden

Address
  
Lake District National Park, Sizergh, Kendal LA8 8DZ, UK

Similar
  
Levens Hall, Museum of Lakeland Life, Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Lakeland Maze Farm Park, Quaker Tapestry

Profiles

Sizergh castle and garden


Sizergh Castle and Garden is a stately home and garden at Helsington in the English county of Cumbria, about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Kendal. The castle, a grade I listed building, is in the care of the National Trust along with its garden and estate. It is the home of the Hornyold-Strickland family.

Contents

In 2016 the Sizergh estate was included in the newly extended Lake District National Park.

Sizergh castle and gardens in the lake district england


Details

The earliest part of the building is a tower of fourteenth or fifteenth century date.

Woodwork

There are oak-panelled interiors, including the Inlaid Chamber, where the panelling is inlaid with floral and geometric patterns in pale poplar and dark bog-oak. The contents of the Inlaid Chamber were sold to the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in the 1890s and it was displayed as a reconstructed period room. The return of the panelling to its original location at Sizergh was advocated by among others Mark Girouard. The panelling returned in 1999 under a long-term loan. In 2017 it was reported that transfer of ownership to the National Trust had been made formal.

The bargeboards probably date from the seventeenth century.

Paintings

The Castle contains a variety of paintings, including the following:

  • a collection of portraits of the Catholic Royal Stuart family reflects the Strickland family's links to the Jacobite court in exile at Saint-Germain-en-Laye. There are portraits by Alexis Simon Belle, painter in ordinary to James VII & II and the Old Pretender, of Queen Mary of Modena and her daughter Princess Louisa Maria.
  • Strickland family portraits, including works by local artist George Romney, a portrait of Mrs Anne Strickland (the artist's mother) by Harriet Strickland (1816–1903), and a portrait of Lady Edeline Sackville.
  • History

    The Deincourt family owned this land from the 1170s. On the marriage of Elizabeth Deincourt to Sir William de Stirkeland in 1239, the estate passed into the hands of what became the Strickland family, who owned it until it was gifted to the National Trust in 1950 by Gerald Strickland, 1st Baron Strickland's grandson Lt. Cdr. Thomas Hornyold-Strickland, 7th Count della Catena.

    Catherine Parr, the sixth wife of Henry VIII and a relative of the Stricklands, is thought to have lived here after her first husband died in 1533. Catherine's second husband, Lord Latymer, was kin to the dowager Lady Strickland.

    It was extended in Elizabethan times. Sir Thomas Strickland went into exile with James II.

    Around 1770, the great hall was again expanded in the Georgian style.

    Media interest

    The Castle was featured in the ITV documentary Inside the National Trust.

    Garden

    The garden has a lake and a kitchen garden as well as an award-winning rock garden. The rock garden, which was constructed in the 1920s, is the largest limestone rock garden belonging to the National Trust. It includes part of the National Collection of hardy ferns.

    Estate

    In 1336 a grant from Edward III allowed Sir Walter Strickland to enclose the land around Sizergh as his exclusive park.

    The estate covers 647 hectares (1,600 acres).

    Biodiversity

    There are various types of habitat. These were enhanced within the context of the Morecambe Bay Nature Improvement Area which received three years of government grant funding (2012–15).

    Birds

    The Sizergh estate is a good place to see birds. For example, hawfinches are attracted to the area because of its hornbeam trees, and these birds sometimes come close to the main car park.

    In 2014 it was reported that 35 ha of wetland habitat was being created in the Lyth Valley on the western edge of the estate. The project has received funding from Natural England as part of a higher level stewardship scheme. It is hoped to attract bittern and other wildlife.

    Butterflies

    Fritillary butterflies live on the estate.

    References

    Sizergh Castle and Garden Wikipedia