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Wray Castle

Wray Castle
Wray Castle 2008.jpg
Wray Castle: its gothic features include fake arrowslits
Wray Castle is located in Cumbria
Wray Castle
Location within Cumbria
Established 2011 (2011)
Location Claife, South Lakeland, Cumbria
Coordinates 54°24′01″N 2°57′51″W / 54.400278°N 2.964167°W / 54.400278; -2.964167Coordinates: 54°24′01″N 2°57′51″W / 54.400278°N 2.964167°W / 54.400278; -2.964167
Owner National Trust
Public transit access See website
Website www.nationaltrust.org.uk/wray-castle
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name R.M.S. Wray Castle
Designated 25 March 1970
Reference no. 1106324
Listed Building – Grade II
Listings 5 including Retaining Walls and Boathouse

Wray Castle is a Victorian neo-gothic building at Claife in the English county of Cumbria. The house and grounds have belonged to the National Trust since 1929, but the house has only recently opened to the public on a regular basis. The grounds, which include part of the shoreline of Windermere, are open all year round and are renowned for their selection of specimen trees - Wellingtonia, redwood, Ginkgo biloba, weeping lime and varieties of beech.

The house was built in 1840 for a retired Liverpudlian surgeon, James Dawson, who built it along with the neighbouring Wray Church using his wife's fortune. After Dawson's death in 1875 the estate was inherited by his fifteen year old nephew, Edward Preston Rawnsley. In 1877 Edward's cousin, Hardwicke Rawnsley, took up the appointment of vicar of Wray Church. To protect the countryside from damaging development, Hardwicke Rawnsley, building on an idea propounded by Ruskin, conceived of a National Trust that could buy and preserve places of natural beauty and historic interest for the nation.

The house has an association with another key player in the National Trust, Beatrix Potter, who spent a summer holiday there when she was 16 in 1882. She bought a small farm in the Claife area, Hill Top, in 1905 with royalties from her first book The Tale of Peter Rabbit. She went on to buy considerable tracts of land nearby, though she never owned the castle itself. In 1929 Wray Castle and 64 acres (260,000 m2) of land were given to the National Trust by Sir Noton and Lady Barclay.

Since the National Trust acquired the castle it has been used for a variety of purposes, for short time from 1929 being a youth hostel

For twenty years from 1931 the castle housed the offices of the Freshwater Biological Association.


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