Manor House - Great Linford, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Dragontree
N 52° 04.337 W 000° 45.509
30U E 653623 N 5771448
This old manor house stands in the city of Milton Keynes.
Waymark Code: WM5935
Location: Southern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 11/30/2008
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Saddlesore1000
Views: 11

The house is now a recording studio as it is part of the Gt Linford Artworks MK Centre with its surrounding buildings being used by them aswell.

The building dates to the 17th century and is set in some fine parkland. It was the seat of the Mayor of London, Sir William Pritchard and he built the central block in 1678 together with the almshouses and school. The Uthwatt family inherited the property and extended the house to its present size in the mid-18th century. They used illusion to emphasise the grandeur of the house, adding false windows above the ballroom and making the stables appear as homes.

Also during this period the grounds were landscaped with additions such as a ha-ha, a gazebo, a tree lined avenue along the track and several ponds. The Grand Union Canal was built through the estate in in the early 19th century destroying one of the ponds but two remain to this day and a fourth one is derelict. The ponds were fed by the 'Hine Well' spring which still flows. During the 1980s more trees and shrubs were added as well as a wildflower meadow. More information about the park can be found here (visit link)

Great Linford was described in 1806 in "Magna Britannia" as follows:

'GREAT LINFORD, in the hundred and deanery of Newport, lies nearly three miles to the south-west of Newport Pagnell. In the reign of King John, the manor belonged to Geoffrey de Gibwen, some time one of his majesty's justices-itinerant. It was afterwards in the Pipards, from whom it passed to the Botelers. Upon the attainder of James Boteler, Earl of Wiltshire, King Edward IV. granted this manor to Richard Middleton esq. and his heirs male. It soon reverted to the crown, and was granted in 1467, to the Princess Elizabeth, who became the queen of Henry VII. It seems to have been afterwards restored to the St. Legers, as representatives, in the female line, of the Botelers, for it appears that Sir George St. Leger exchanged it for other lands, with King Henry VIII. Queen Elizabeth granted it to Richard Campion and John Thompson. It was purchased of the Thompsons, about the year 1632, by Sir Robert Napier, whose heirs sold it about 1679, to Sir William Pritchard, alderman of London. By his bequest, if became the property of his relation, [Footnote: It has been said that Sir William Pritchard bequeathed this estate to St. Bartholomew's hospital; but it appears by the will, that the bequest to that hospital was only in the event of a failure of heirs, according to the entail,] Thomas Uthwatt esq. Upon the decease of Mrs. Uthwatt, lady of the manor, in 1800, it devolved to the Rev. Henry Uthwatt Andrewes, who has since taken the name of Uthwatt, which is to be assumed by his issue male, when they shall succeed and come into actual possession of the estates, devised by the will of his godfather and relation, Henry Uthwatt esq. of Great Linford, bearing date 1757.

In the parish church is the monument of Sir William Pritchard above-mentioned, who died in the year 1704. He was president of St. Bartholomew's hospital, where he erected a convenient apartment, at his own expence, for performing the operation of cutting for the stone. He founded an alms-house at Great Linford, for six poor men, who receive from his endowment an allowance of 1s. 6d. each weekly, and a school, with a salary of 10 l. per annum for the master. Mr. Uthwatt is patron of the rectory.

Dr. Richard Sandy, alias Napier, who was presented to this rectory in 1589, was a very remarkable character: he was son of Sir Robert Napier, of Luton Hoo, in Bedfordshire, and having been instructed in physic and astrology, by the celebrated Dr. Simon Forman, commenced the profession of those sciences, in conjunction with the cure of souls: his practice as a physician became very extensive, it being given out that he held conversations with the angel Raphael, by means of which, he prognosticated with certainty, the death or recovery of his patients. This procured him great credit in a superstituous age, and he was resorted to by persons of the first rank and consequence. It appears by a passage in Howell's Familiar Letters, that the Earl of Sunderland (lord president of the north) was under his care for some months, at his house at Linford, in 1629. It was said of this emperic divine, that he was so devout, that his knees grew horny by much praying, and that he died in that posture, at a great age, in the year 1634. His burial is thus entered in the parish register, "April 15, 1634. Buried, Mr. Richard Napier, rector, the most renowned physician both of body and soul." Dr.Napier's papers came into the hands of Mr. Ashmole, and are now in the museum at Oxford.'

There is an information board in the park detailing the different names associated with the estate.
Earliest Recorded Date of Construction: 01/01/1678

Additional Dates of Construction:
Enlarged in the 17th century Gardens landscaped in the 17th century Grand Union Canal cut through the gardens in the 19th century 1980s saw more shrubs added


Architectural Period/Style: Elizabethan

Type of Building e.g. Country House, Stately Home, Manor:
Manor House


Interesting Historical Facts or Connections:
Please see above


Main Material of Construction: Stone

Private/Public Access: Public Arts Centre

Related Website: [Web Link]

Rating:

Architect (if known): Not listed

Landscape Designer (if known): Not listed

Listed Building Status (if applicable): Not listed

Admission Fee (if applicable): Not Listed

Opening Hours (if applicable): Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Tell us about your visit with any details of interest about the property. Please supply at least one original photograph from a different aspect taken on your current visit.
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Alancache visited Manor House - Great Linford, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, UK 10/23/2015 Alancache visited it
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