Houghton House- Beds
Posted by: Norfolk12
N 52° 02.640 W 000° 29.166
30U E 672397 N 5768914
Houghton House is a ruined house in Bedfordshire, on the ridge just north of Ampthill, and about 8 miles south of Bedford. It is a Grade I listed building.
Waymark Code: WM3N6V
Location: United Kingdom
Date Posted: 04/23/2008
Views: 26
The true Hill Difficulty is thought to be the road from Bedford to Ampthill the B530. Just outside Ampthill there is a steep hill with a sharp bend on it. At the top of this hill are the remains of Houghton House which is thought to be House or Palace Beautiful.
From the road you get a good view of Houghton House sitting up on the hill, this must have been a truely impressive site during Bunyan's time.
"
....he lift up his eyes, and behold there was a very stately palace before him, the name of which was Beautiful, and it stood by the highway-side."
House Beautiful has recently under gone a major restoration and now all the scaffolding and plastic sheets have been removed you will get a good view of Houghton House .
details from wikipedia ;
Houghton House is a ruined house in Bedfordshire, on the ridge just north of Ampthill, and about 8 miles south of Bedford. It is a Grade I listed building.
Being set above the surrounding countryside, it commands excellent views, and can be visited during daylight hours. It is an English Heritage property which is free to visit.
The house was built in approximately 1615 for the writer, translator, and literary patron Mary Sidney Herbert, Dowager Countess of Pembroke (born 27 October 1561) but she died of smallpox on 25 September 1621, not long after its completion. A Jacobean style frieze on the western side of the house incorporated devices from Mary's ancestral Sidney and Dudley families.
After the Countess' death, the house passed to Thomas Bruce, 1st Earl of Elgin in 1624. The Bruce family owned the house until the 3rd Earl, a strong supporter of the Stuarts retired to exile overseas in 1696 on account of his loyalty to King James II of England.
Thomas Bruce, 3rd Earl of Elgin never returned to Houghton and so sold the house to John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford in 1738. The 4th Duke was predeceased by his sons (the 4th Duke's son and heir, Francis Russell, Marquess of Tavistock died when he fell from a horse whilst hunting) and therefore the house and the dukedom passed to his grandson, Francis Russell.
In 1794, Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford stripped Houghton House of its furnishings and removed the roof. This may have been due, in part, to his father's horseriding tragedy. The Duke never married nor had he produced a legitimate heir. He died in 1802 by which time the house, now open to the elements, was already in decay.
Conservation work was undertaken in 2006 to help maintain safety and improve the understanding of the site. New visitor information boards were installed as a result. Sadly, in 2007, a number of these have been vandalised, leaving empty boards behind.
It is said that the house was the model for House Beautiful in John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress. Its staircase survives in The Swan Hotel in Bedford.
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