Blickling Hall (Blickling)
Phone: 01263 738030
Please mention the Glaven Valley when calling
National Trust. 17thC Jacobean house and garden. Walled garden, organgery, lake and walks with picnic area and shop. Children are welcomed with a special guide and menu, scribble sheets., play area and garden quizzes. Wheelchairs available.Address:
Blickling
Aylsham
NR11 6NF
Entry categories: Wedding Reception Venues | Registry Offices & Licensed Wedding Venues | Stately Homes, Houses & Gardens
More Details
This spectacular and beautiful Jacobean house entices you to visit an equally spectacular and beautiful garden beyond. Incorporating important elements created by the leading garden designers over the past three centuries, this is a garden that includes a large and wonderfully planted parterre with a delightful colour scheme created by one of the leading lights in the garden design sphere before WWII. Fantastic topiary, including the famous grand pianos, complements this sublimely, and the dry moat contains plants seldom found in this part of the world including buddleia, auriculata, ceanothus and camellia.
History of Garden
The house was built by Sir Henry Hobart, but little remains of his early 17th century garden. His great grandson, the 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire redesigned the garden in the early 18th century and the central axis of the garden and grand vista looking up to the Doric Temple is still there. His son, the 2nd Earl, living at the height of the Landscape Movement, concentrated on creating a park with rolling pasture, the great lake and the Orangery, probably designed by Wyatt and built in 1782. It is known that Humphry Repton suggested some of these improvements and Repton's son, John, was employed after 1823, working on garden furniture and other features. In the 1860s the 8th Marquis Lothian created the present grid pattern for the formal areas of the garden employing, Markham Nesfield, the son of William Andrews Nesfield who did much work at Kew, to excavate the 2-acre parterre, although Lady Lothian dictated its interior planting. The present-day planting there was carried out by Norah Lindsay in the years between the World Wars and has been carried forward by the national Trust. She also designed the less flamboyant Secret Garden.
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