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Home > New Search > Corsham Court

Corsham Court  England 
COR-shum
Corsham, Wiltshire, England

Circa Date: rebuilt 1745-1800 around 1582 core

Status: Fully Extant

    

Special Info / Location/ Date

Special Info
Phonetic Pronunciation of House Name
COR-shum

Location
Country
England
District Today
Wiltshire
 Historic County
 City / Town / Village
Corsham
 Latitude
51.43504
 Longitude
-2.18242

Date
Start Date
Completion Date
Circa Date
rebuilt 1745-1800 around 1582 core
Images

The Rear Façade from a 19th century print

Architects

Designed   Design for North Front (may not have been executed).
Date   1747-49

Designed   Hall and Staircase
Date   1844-49

Designed   Altered House together with Repton
Date   1797-98

Designed   Altered House together with Nash
Date   1797-98

Designed   Enlarged House, including addition of Picture Gallery (1760). Also designed the Gothic Bath House and the Orangery (1764).
Date   1760-64

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)
Vol. II. p. 216, 1853.
Country Life
LXXX, 576 [Furniture], 1936. LXXXII, 516 plan, 548, 1937.
J.P. Neale (Neale's Views of Seats)
2.S. Vol. II, 1825.
Access / Ownership / Seat

Access
Open to Public Please note: Houses listed as being open "By Appointment" are usually country house hotels or B&Bs.
Yes
Historic Houses Association Member
Yes
Phone Number If calling from the U.S., delete the first "0" in British numbers.
01249-701-610
Fax Number
01249-444-556
Email
Website
Awards

Current Ownership
Current Ownership Type
Individual / Family Trust
Primary Current Ownership Use
Private Home
Current Ownership Use / Details

Seat ("Seat" is loosely defined as any family that occupied the house for a period of 2 years or more)
Today Seat of
James Methuen-Campbell; Methuen family here since 1745.
A Past Seat(s) of
Queen Elizabeth I, 16th century. Sir Christopher Hatton, 16th century (leased from Queen Elizabeth). Thomas Smythe, late 16th century.
Possible (Unsure) Seat of
History / Gardens & Park / Movies

History
Earlier House(s) / Building(s)
An earlier Elizabethan house was rebuilt 1745-70 by Paul Methuen.
House Replaced By
Built / Designed For
House & Family History
“Visiting Corsham is like visiting an elderly great-aunt, albeit a magnificent one.” Simon Jenkins’s affectionate comment about Corsham perfectly describes this magnificent house. Corsham has not been subjected to substantial change in the last 150 years, and thus remains an outstanding example of a house and estate that has remained in the same family since the 18th century, with its great collections substantially intact. The Manor of Corsham was a royal possession from before the Norman Conquest, first recorded as such in 1016 by William of Malmesbury. In 1572 Elizabeth I leased the house to Sir Christopher Hatton, but the central part of the current house was built in 1582 for Thomas Smythe, a native of Corsham who made a fortune as Collector of Customs for the Port of London. The Estate passed through the hands of various owners until 1745, when it was acquired for the young Paul Methuen, who took possession of the Estate in 1747. The Methuen family originated in Scotland, but in the 17th century a member had settled in Bradford-on-Avon, near Corsham, and made a fortune from the woolen cloth industry there (he was described by John Aubrey as the greatest clothier of his time). His son, John Methuen (1650-1706), added to the family’s distinction by serving as Lord Chancellor of Ireland for William III and as Ambassador Extraordinary to Portugal from 1703 until 1706, when he cemented vital trading links with Portugal in the famous Methuen Treaty of 1703 (the treaty allowed the export of British woolens to Portugal with a preferential 33 1/3 percent tax discount on Portuguese wines in return, which caused a significant metamorphosis in British drinking customs). John Methuen’s eldest son, Sir Paul Methuen (1672-1757), continued his father’s public service in both diplomatic and national appointments and became Treasurer of the King’s Household to George I. Beginning in 1715, he collected works of art, acquiring Old Masters in Europe, but increasingly from auctions in London, including Van Dyck’s "Betrayal of Christ", Rubens’s "Wolf and Fox Hunt," and other works by Strozzi, Murillo, and Reni, as well as fine English 16th and 17th century portraits. His collection was kept in London until his death in 1757. Sir Paul’s collection was inherited by his nephew and namesake who had acquired Corsham a decade earlier; upon his inheritance of the art collection he immediately began to alter his house to accommodate his uncle’s magnificent collection. In 1759-60 he commissioned Lancelot Capability Brown, whose work for Lord Coventry at Croome Court, Worcestershire (1751-52), may have come to the young Methuen’s attention. Brown’s solution at Corsham was to double the width of the Elizabethan wings to create a picture gallery, 72 feet long, specifically scaled to house Methuen’s paintings, with additional rooms for a state apartment in the East Wing and a Library in the West Wing. The rooms were fitted and decorated sumptuously in a grand Rococo style with plasterwork by Thomas Stocking of Bristol, joinery by John Hobcraft of London (who also worked at Croome), chimneypieces by Scheemakers, gilt tables and frames by Thomas Johnson, cabinet work by John Cobb, and a huge suite of mahogany seat furniture covered in crimson damask supplied by Cole of Golden Square in 1769. In 1770 Robert Adam provided designs for a set of splendid mirror frames and a picture frame for the Gallery and Cabinet Rooms. Outside, Brown landscaped the Park and designed a charming Bath House. Between 1797 and 1802 John Nash extended the House again to accommodate more of the Methuen collection brought from London, creating a grand Hall, an enlarged Library, Music and Dining Rooms in the Gothick style, of which little except the Library survives now, as the House was altered yet again, 1845-49, for the 1st Lord Methuen by the architect Thomas Bellamy, who was forced to pull down much of Nash’s poor quality work. Bellamy created a new Hall and Grand Staircase in a neo-Jacobean style with a massive central tower which still dominates the garden front of the House. In 1855 Lord Methuen inherited through his wife a remarkable collection of early Florentine and other Italian Renaissance paintings, including Filippo Lippi’s "Annunciation," and Italian sculpture and furniture acquired in the early 19th century by his father-in-law, The Rev. John Sanford of Nynehead in Somerset. These pictures, with their distinctive frames, are now merged with Paul Methuen’s 18th century collection of Old Masters. During World War II Corsham housed girls from Westonbirt School in one part of the House and convalescent soldiers in another. Between 1946 and 1986 Corsham was the home of the Bath Academy of Art, under the encouragement of the renowned artist Paul Ayshford, 4th Lord Methuen (1886-1974), a trustee of The National Gallery, The Tate Gallery, The Imperial War Museum, and President of the Royal West of England Academy. In recent years, negotiations with HM Treasury have ensured that the most important paintings and furniture in the Methuen collections have been accepted in lieu of inheritance tax but have been allowed to remain in situ at Corsham, thus preserving the integrity of this remarkable property. The town of Corsham is also home to the UK Government's previously secret 35-acre Cold War underground nuclear bunker city, code named Burlington, located across the other side of town from Corsham Court. (We are very grateful to Lisa White and the Attingham Summer School for the bulk of this history of Corsham.)
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.
Corsham contains one of the finest collections of Old Master paintings in Britain, including Paul Methuen’s collection of 16th and 17th century Italian and Flemish paintings and statues. The collection is particularly strong in Italian paintings and includes works by Guercino, Strozzi, Reni, and Salvator Rosa, and a sweet portrait by Sofonisba Anguissola that shows the artist's two sisters and a brother. Capability Brown designed the Picture Gallery in 1760 specifically to house the Old Masters bequeathed by Sir Paul Methuen (1672-1757) to his cousin and godson, also named Paul Methuen. The House also contains a collection purchased in the mid-19th century of Italian masters and stone-inlaid furniture. The State Room collection includes works by Chippendale, Van Dyck, Reni, Rosa, Rubens ("Wolf and Fox Hunt"), Lippi ("Annunciation"), Reynolds, Romney, and a pianoforte by Clementi. Van Dyck’s "The Betrayal of Christ" was turned over to the government in lieu of tax in 1981. The painting was accepted by HM Government "in lieu in situ" of Estate Duty tax and presented to Bristol's City Museums, Art Galleries, and Archive in 1984 and loaned back to Corsham, where it remains on display today.
Comments

Gardens & Park
Garden, Park, Follies and Outbuildings
Lancelot ''Capability'' Brown designed the grounds, together with Humphry Repton, in the 1760s. Also in the 1760s, Brown doubled the size of the gabled wings at both sides of Gateway, creating the East Wing as the Picture Galleries. Brown also designed the Gothic Bath House and the Orangery. In 2009-10 Bath Spa University re-opened the Barn at the rear of the House (vacant since 1986) as its new arts centre; in 2011 the University opened a new recording studio in the Barn.
Chapel & Church

Movies
Location for Movies / TV
"Barry Lyndon" (1975). "Northanger Abbey" (1987 - BBC TV Screen Two movie, as Fullerton rectory). “Remains of the Day” (1993 - one of the four houses used [Library and Dining Room interiors] as Darlington Hall). "Tess of the D'Urbervilles" (2008 - TV mini series).
Bibliography

Author   Pym, John
Year Published   1995
Reference   pg. 103


Author   Sayer, Michael
Year Published   1993
Reference  


Author   Hussey, Christopher
Year Published   1955
Reference   pg. 228-229


Author   NA
Year Published   NA
Reference   Dec 1985, pg. 1181


Author   Methuen-Campbell, James
Year Published   2004
Reference   pg. 8



There are no documents associated with this house.

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