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Packwood House

Packwood House
Country House and Gardens
Packwood House - geograph.org.uk - 6884.jpg
The eastern front of the house
Country England
State Warwickshire
Region West Midlands
District Warwickshire
Municipality Warwick
Coordinates 52°20′51″N 01°44′47″W / 52.34750°N 1.74639°W / 52.34750; -1.74639Coordinates: 52°20′51″N 01°44′47″W / 52.34750°N 1.74639°W / 52.34750; -1.74639
Founded Built 16th century
Restored 20th century
Owner National Trust
Visitation accessible to the public with a fee (All year round)
Website: http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/packwood-house/

Packwood House is a timber-framed Tudor manor house near Lapworth, Warwickshire. Owned by the National Trust since 1941, the house is a Grade I listed building. It has a wealth of tapestries and fine furniture, and is known for the garden of yews.

The house began as a modest timber-framed farmhouse constructed for John Fetherston between 1556 and 1560. The last member of the Fetherston family died in 1876. In 1904, and the house was purchased by Birmingham industrialist Alfred Ash. It was inherited by Graham Baron Ash (Baron in this case being a name not a title) in 1925, who spent the following two decades creating a house of Tudor character. He purchased an extensive collection of 16th- and 17th-century furniture, some obtained from nearby Baddesley Clinton. The great barn of the farm was converted into a Tudor-style hall with sprung floor for dancing, and was connected to the main house by the addition of a Long Gallery in 1931.

In 1941, Ash donated the house and gardens to the National Trust in memory of his parents but continued to live in the house until 1947 when he moved to Wingfield Castle.

The famous Yew Garden containing over 100 trees was laid out in the mid-17th century by John Fetherston, the lawyer. The clipped yews are supposed to represent "The Sermon on the Mount". Twelve great yews are known as the "Apostles" and the four big specimens in the middle are 'The Evangelists'. A tight spiral path lined with box hedges climbs a hummock named "The Mount". The single yew that crowns the summit is known as "The Master". The smaller yew trees are called "The Multitude" and were planted in the 19th century to replace an orchard.


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