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Home > New Search > Luton Hoo

Luton Hoo  England 
LOO-tun hoo
Luton Hoo, Bedfordshire, England

Started 1767
Completed 1775 w/significant later additions and alterations

Status: Fully Extant

    

Special Info / Location/ Date

Special Info
Phonetic Pronunciation of House Name
LOO-tun hoo

Location
Country
England
District Today
Bedfordshire
 Historic County
 City / Town / Village
Luton Hoo
 Latitude
51.85463
 Longitude
-0.39764

Date
Start Date
1767
Completion Date
1775 w/significant later additions and alterations
Circa Date
Images

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Architects

Designed   Reconstructed House after 1843 fire
Date   post 1843

Designed   Stables
Date  
Attribution of this work is uncertain.

Designed   Remodeled interiors in French Edwardian style
Date   1903-07

Designed   Rebuilt the house after the 1843 fire
Date   1850s

Designed   Additions to House for 2nd Marquess of Bute
Date   circa 1825-30

Designed   Gardens and grounds
Date   1770s

Designed   New house for the 3rd Earl of Bute
Date   1767-75

Extant / Listed / References

Extant
Extant Type
Fully Extant
Extant Details

Listed
House Listed As 
Grade I
Gardens Listed As  
Grade II*
On SAVE Britain's Heritage's List of Buildings at Risk
No
Country House:  Yes

References
Vitruvius Britannicus
Vitruvius Scoticus
J.B. Burke (Burke's Visitation of Seats)
Country Life
CVII, 1282 plans, 1950. Jan 16 & 23, 1992.
J.P. Neale (Neale's Views of Seats)
Vol. I, 1818.
Access / Ownership / Seat

Access
Open to Public Please note: Houses listed as being open "By Appointment" are usually country house hotels or B&Bs.
By Appointment
Historic Houses Association Member
Phone Number If calling from the U.S., delete the first "0" in British numbers.
01582-734-437
Fax Number
01582-485-438
Email
Website
Awards

Current Ownership
Current Ownership Type
Corporation
Primary Current Ownership Use
Hotel
Current Ownership Use / Details
Today Luton Hoo Hotel, Golf and Spa, a member of the Elite Hotels group.

Seat ("Seat" is loosely defined as any family that occupied the house for a period of 2 years or more)
Today Seat of
Phillips family; here since 1903. The mansion house was sold in 1999 and converted into the Luton Hoo Hotel & Country Estate, part of the Elite Hotel Group. The Phillips family retained part of the historic estate and make their home there.
A Past Seat(s) of
de Hoo family, circa 13th century to 1454. Sir Robert Napier, Bt., 17th century. Earl of Bute and Marquess of Bute, 18th and 19th centuries. Leigh family, 19th century. Wernher family, 20th century.
Possible (Unsure) Seat of
History / Gardens & Park / Movies

History
Earlier House(s) / Building(s)
There has been a house here since the 13th century.
House Replaced By
Built / Designed For
House & Family History
The de Hoo family probably took their name from the land they owned (Hoo is a Saxon word meaning the spur of a hill). The last de Hoo was created Lord Hoo and Hastings in 1448. James I visited Luton Hoo in 1611 and knighted Robert Napier, whose seat the House then was. John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute and Prime Minister to George III, bought the Estate for £94,700 in 1762 (equivalent to approximately £13 million in 2008 values using the retail price index). Robert Adam was engaged by the 3rd Earl to rebuild the old House (Adam considered the Library his chef d’oeuvre). Dr. Johnson, visiting with Boswell in 1781, was particularly complimentary about the House. After a severe fire in 1843 the Butes sold Luton to John Shaw Leigh. Sir Julius Wernher purchased the Estate from the Leigh family in 1903. Wernher made a fortune in South African diamond mines, was a friend of Cecil Rhodes, and was at the time of the purchase of Luton Hoo one of the richest men in the world. The interiors were remodeled in Edwardian style for Sir Julius by Mewes and Davis, the designers of the Ritz Hotel in London. In 1891 Mary of Teck, later Queen Mary, consort of George V, accepted, at the age of 24, an offer of marriage at Luton from Prince Albert, Duke of Clarence, the heir to the British throne (a mere six weeks after the engagement was announced the Duke of Clarence died of pneumonia and the following year Mary became engaged to the new heir, the Duke’s brother, George). During the First World War Luton Hoo was used as a military convalescent home for officers, while World War II saw the House serving as Eastern Command Headquarters. When Harold Wernher's wife, Anastasia Romanov (Lady Zia), died in 1977, the Estate passed to her grandson, Nicholas Phillips, a godson and nephew of the Duke of Edinburgh (the Queen and Prince Philip spent their wedding night here). Mr. Phillips died at age 43 on Mar 1, 1991; in 1997 Luton Hoo was put on the market by his widow with an asking price of £25 million. The mansion house and part of the Estate sold in 1999 for approximately £10 million to a Canadian-backed group, Elite Hotels. Elite spent years obtaining planning permission to convert the house and stables into a five-star hotel, and to build ancillary buildings, all of which opened in 2007, after a £60 million transformation.
Collections This field lists art objects that are currently or were previously in the collection of the house.

For information on the history of British currency, click here.  To use a chart that allows you to compare the purchasing power of money In Great Britain from 1264 to any other year, including the present, click here.  To use a currency conversion to see the current value of the British pound, click here.
Luton Hoo once contained a large collection of possessions of the Russian Imperial Family, including a significant collection of the works of Carl Faberge. The collection of Faberge came to Luton Hoo through Lady Zia Wernher, who inherited it from her parents, Grand Duke Michael of Russia and the Countess Torby. One of the most important pieces of Faberge in the collection was a Freedom Box in nephrite with red and green gold mounts and the lid surmounted by the Russian Eagle in matte and polished gold; this piece was given to the 14th Earl of Pembroke by Tsar Nicholas II in 1896 during a visit to Balmoral to visit Queen Victoria. Luton Hoo was the home of the Wernher Collection (largely accumulated by Sir Julius Wernher), once one of the finest collections of art in Britain. (The collection was given to the Nation, and, since Jun 2002, has been housed at Ranger's House, London, a property of English Heritage). The Wernher Collection includes world-class collections of medieval ivories, German silver gilt, Italian majolica, Renaissance jewels, and Limoges enamels. Outstanding individual pieces from the collection include "Lady Caroline Price" by Joshua Reynolds, the Sevres service of Catherine the Great, and the altarpiece of St. Michael by Bartholomew Bermejo, considered the finest example of Spanish 15th century painting in Britain. Albrecht Altdorfer’s "Christ Taking Leave of His Mother" was sold to the National Gallery in 1981 for £825,000. John Constable’s "Harnham Bridge Looking Towards Salisbury Cathedral" was sold on Nov 18, 1992 for £850,000. Bernard van Risamburgh’s ebonized kingwood and Chinese black lacquer commode was sold on Jun 11, 1992 for £660,000. “Winter Landscape of 1650” by Aert van der Neer sold at auction in 1996 for £2.3 million. The 15th century “St. Michael Triumphant Over the Devil” by Bartolomeo Bermejo was sold to the National Gallery, London for £10 million. On March 26, 2013 Lyon & Turnbull sold at auction in Edinburgh for £400 a George III mahogany and kingwood Pembroke table that had once been in the collection at Luton Hoo. The drawer interior features an old label that says "Collection Wernher #793."
Comments

Gardens & Park
Garden, Park, Follies and Outbuildings
At the time of the 1999 sale to Elite Hotels, the Luton Hoo Estate stood at 1,545 acres and included a pheasant shoot, a 50-acre lake, and an Italian garden. The famous landscape was laid out by Capability Brown in the 1770s; the Adam family probably designed the Stables in the 18th century. The Luton Hoo hotel sits in 1,000 acres of parkland and features an 18-hole golf course.
Chapel & Church
The Chapel was restored in the late 20th century and consecrated in 1991 in the Russian Orthodox Church in memory of Tsar Nicholas II and the Imperial Family.

Movies
Location for Movies / TV
"A Shot In The Dark" (1964). "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush" (1967). "Never Say Never Again" (1983 - as the health clinic). "Inspector Morse" (1987 - TV series). "Agatha Christie's Poirot" (1992 - TV series, as the Suffolk country home of Lord and Lady Horbury in the epsiode "Death in the Clouds"). "The Secret Garden" (1993). "Four Weddings and a Funeral" (1994). "The Buccaneers" (1995 - TV mini series, interiors only). "The Wings of the Dove" (1997). "Wilde" (1997). "A Dance to the Music of Time" (1997 - as the setting for the embassy reception). "Mrs. Brown" (1997). “Eyes Wide Shut” (1999). "Quills" (2000 - as the exterior of Charenton Asylum). "The Way We Live Now" (2001). "Enigma" (2001). "The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby" (2001 - TV movie). "The Importance of Being Earnest" (2002). "The Lost Prince" (2003 - TV movie, as interiors of Sandringham; Stables used as house where the Russian Imperial family were executed). "De-Lovely" (2004). "Bleak House" (2005 - TV series). "Little Dorrit" (2008 - TV mini series, as Bleeding Heart Yard). "Great Expectations" (2011 - BBC TV mini series; Estate buildings were used as Joe's Forge interior).
Bibliography

Author   Sayer, Michael
Year Published   1993
Reference  


Author   Smith, M. Urwick
Year Published   1975
Reference   pgs. 8, 10


Author   Colvin, Howard
Year Published   1995
Reference   pg. 880


Author   NA
Year Published   NA
Reference   Vanessa Thorpe article on Luton Hoo, Sep 13, 1997



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