3.0 The Park Conservation Area 3.1 Location & Setting: CA1: PART 1: Section 3.0 To 3.4
3.0 The Park Conservation Area 3.1 Location & Setting: CA1: PART 1: Section 3.0 To 3.4
3.0 The Park Conservation Area 3.1 Location & Setting: CA1: PART 1: Section 3.0 To 3.4
Map I
Map J
That part of the Conservation Area that lies within Cirencester Park also lies
with the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty [AONB], a national
designation which seeks to protect the most sensitive landscapes in the
country. The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 introduced a statutory
duty for local and other relevant authorities. When exercising any functions in
relation to land in, or affecting an AONB, Cotswold District Council is required
to have regard to the conservation and enhancement of the natural beauty of
the designated area. Planning Policy Statement 7 – Sustainable Development
in Rural Areas – acknowledges that, along with National Parks, AONBs have
the highest status of protection in relation to landscape and scenic beauty.
The Conservation Area takes in the whole of Cecily Hill where the boundary
on its north side follows that of rear gardens which back onto the River Walk
as far west as the public outdoor pool from where it follows the line of a former
canal feeder, now a minor stream to take in the farmstead known as the
Barton and its ancillary agricultural buildings.
From here the boundary is marked by the northern edge of a pathway in the
Park which lines the edge of the mature bank of trees running north of the
Broad Ride which runs east-west. The westernmost section of the
Conservation Area takes in the Broad Ride with its bank of trees on both north
and south sides as far west as the north-south path marked by two rusticated
pillars and a change in the management regime beyond.
The boundary then follows the southern side of the pathway on an east-west
axis taking in the former Archery House now used as a sports pavilion. The
boundary continues westwards to include the parkland railings and follows the
south side of the path until it reaches the ditch marking the stone-walled ha-
ha. The west side of the ditch and ha-ha mark the boundary along Windsor
Walk which leads to the former hunt kennels facing the old Tetbury Road and
the lodges and gates forming the access.
The southern boundary of the Park Conservation Area is marked by the lower
edge of the raised walkway [including the grass verge and steps and ramps
where they occur] which continues past the former Museum of Roman
Antiquities [now used as an office] and in front of the Mansion at the east end
marked by the yew hedge and tall rusticated gates and small lodge.
The boundary finishes where it meets Cecily Hill following the outer edge of
the slim and incomplete path alongside the stable block in Park Lane.
Map K
• The main entrance from the town leads west through high wrought-iron
gates and railings [77], understood to have been brought from Carshalton
in Surrey and erected in 1856 [listed Grade II]; they were altered in the
nineteenth century and stand between two large mid-nineteenth-century
stone lodges [78].
77 78
From the gates, the principle axis within the Park, the Broad Ride, extends
westwards in a straight line to the village of Sapperton.
The Park consists of extensive woodland with park and private pleasure
grounds, also built by the first Earl c.1714-c.1718 [listed Grade II], located
west and south of the Mansion comprising the Italian Garden and the Temple
Garden, each with eighteenth-century garden buildings.
79 80
The first Earl Bathurst, later Lord Bathurst, inherited Oakley Grove with its
Elizabethan house and estate grounds in 1704. In 1716, he bought a large
area to the west and contiguous with his own property, from Sir Robert
Atkyns, Gloucestershire’s first and eminent historian. It comprised Oakley
Wood and the manor of Sapperton, where on the east slope of the valley and
close to the parish church, stood a picturesque Tudor manor house, the home
of the Atkyns family, which Bathurst demolished.
Allen Bathurst then set about landscaping the conjoined areas to form
Cirencester Park. He did so in collaboration with his friend the great English
poet, Alexander Pope [1688-1744], who was a frequent visitor. The Park is
known as an early and fine example of “rural and extensive gardening”
advocated by the influential writer and garden designer Stephen Switzer
[c1682-1745]. Pope was also a key figure associated with the eighteenth
century Enlightenment; Bathurst and Pope were both Tories and members of
the Kit-Cat Club, a secret political association whose most prominent member
was the English architect Sir John Vanbrugh [1664? – 1726] and who is
perhaps best known as the designer of Blenheim Palace in Woodstock,
Oxfordshire [1705-1722].
The Park was designed with deer hunting in mind and is mainly wooded to the
north and west with mature beech and other deciduous and coniferous
species; it is more open to the south-west. It was conceived at a time when
geometric avenues, influenced by Continental examples such as that at
Versailles, were starting to be considered old-fashioned and when the
concept of naturalism, a more informal approach, was being developed.
Cirencester Park combines both the formal geometric designs of previous
designed parks characterised by radiating avenues extending in straight lines
between principal viewpoints, and the naturalistic elements of later designs
incorporating irregularly shaped woods and glades and occasional serpentine
paths.
Southwest of the pleasure grounds, within the private grounds of the Mansion,
is a tree-lined lake [c.5 hectares] dug by Lord Bathurst in c1736. It is one of
the earliest irregular pieces of water in the history of English gardening and
fits perfectly with the notion of the “amiable simplicity of unadorned nature” so
admired by Pope.
The first Earl had a long life; he died in 1775 aged 91 years, and his designs
were little influenced by changes in fashion over his lifetime. The Park was as
yet unfinished and it was his successor who was responsible for the creation
and planting out of the easternmost mile or so of the Broad Walk, now
contained within the Park Conservation Area. Later Lord Bathursts too,
particularly Henry, the third Earl, continued planting to the original grand
design well into the nineteenth century and succeeding generations have
renewed the scheme to the present day.
There are several intersections along the Broad Ride [or Broad Avenue], the
first being a seating enclosure known as the Hexagon, and occasionally and
erroneously as the Octagon. Some 700 metres northwest of the Mansion, the
Hexagon faces Windsor Walk which runs southwards, with a stone-faced ha-
ha to its west, bounding the grounds of the Mansion.
Approximately 2km further west along the Broad Ride, near the Polo Ground,
is the Seven Rides marked by Pope’s Seat [listed Grade II* and named in
honour of Alexander Pope] and a further 3.5km west is Ten Rides set deep in
the west part of Oakley Wood.
Pope’s Seat [82] and the Hexagon [81] are just two of several garden
buildings designed by the first Lord Bathurst. The latter lies within the Park
Conservation Area and dates from c.1736; it is listed Grade II*. On Rudder’s
plan of 1779 the Hexagon appears at the meeting place of three rides and
three smaller walks and then enjoyed views of the Horse Temple [now moved]
and Hartley’s Temple [now removed]. The two arches to the left and right
were possibly blocked when the Broad Ride was extended eastwards past the
Hexagon after 1779.
81 82
Originally, the former Elm Avenue [now Windsor Walk] was the principal vista
on a line extending west from the church tower through the centre of The
Mansion and terminating at Queen Anne’s Monument [83], erected in 1714.
The monument was erected to the Tory heroine and comprises a Roman
Doric column some 50 feet [15 metres] high, crowned with a larger than life-
size statue of the queen.
The lake was another first; whilst most Georgian country gentleman’s estates
would contain a formal water feature, in c1736 Bathurst created a lake that
was irregular in shape and made to look as natural as possible. This was a
complete departure and even pre-dated the large serpentine lake at
Stourhead in Wiltshire certainly not begun before 1741.
83
Cirencester House, at the east end of the Park, was also built and designed
by the first Earl Bathurst from c1714 to c1718, in a restrained classical style.
Over the years it has been variously known as Apsley House – a family name
originating from the marriage of the first Earl with his cousin Catherine Apsley
– and also Cirencester House; today it is usually referred to as the Mansion,
Cirencester. The original house on the site – Oakley Grove - was built for Sir
John Danvers in the late sixteenth century. The first Earl substantially rebuilt
the Elizabethan house to totally new designs of his own making.
84
85
Henry, the third Earl later employed the architect Robert Smirke in 1810-11 to
add the present north wing and demolish the west porch; Smirke was
probably also responsible for the rebuilding of the east front in 1830 and for
the stable block to the north of the Mansion. It has been suggested 1 that a
Castle stood where the Mansion now stands, at the west end of Castle Street
which would have joined the castle to Market Place in medieval times. The
site lies between the two principal Roman entrances to the town from the west
and at the junction of the Roman rampart. If the Castle was sited here, the
motte would have stood at the southern side beside the Fosse Way where the
present Tetbury Road is now found.
1
Slater [1976]
86 87
Until 1818 Cecily Hill was the principal turnpike road leaving the town for
Stroud via Park Corner. The Bathursts diverted the route and the line from
what is today the old Tetbury Road to Sapperton was adopted, skirting the
southern edge of the Park [89].
88 89
A chapel dedicated to St Cecilia may be the origin of the name Cecily Hill. The
chapel is thought to have been sited where No.7 now stands [90]; it had its
own burial ground and was in use in the fifteenth century but is known to have
been demolished by c1540.
90
91