Banwell Castle

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Banwell Castle
Stone building with embattlements
Location Banwell, Somerset, England
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Built 1847
Built for John Dyer Sympson
Architect Augustus Pugin
Architectural style(s) Victorian Gothic Revival
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name: Banwell Castle, terraces and courtyard walls
Designated 9 February 1961[1]
Reference no. 350213
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name: Coachhouse at Banwell Castle
Designated 17 January 1984[2]
Reference no. 33347
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name: Gatehouse, stables and flanking walls at Banwell Castle
Designated 9 February 1961[3]
Reference no. 33348
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name: Terrace and dairy at Banwell Castle
Designated 17 January 1984[4]
Reference no. 33349
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official name: West garden walls with towers at Banwell Castle
Designated 17 January 1984[5]
Reference no. 33350
Banwell Castle is located in Somerset
Banwell Castle
Location of Banwell Castle in Somerset

Banwell Castle is a Victorian Gothic Revival mansion in Banwell, Somerset, England. It is a Grade II* listed building.[1] The castle buildings, now a hotel and restaurant, and sometimes used as a wedding venue,[6] are set in 25 acres (10 ha) of grounds which are used for hawking activities.[7]

History

The land on which the house is built was owned by the Bishop of Bath and Wells. It was sold to John and Joan Landown in 1753. It was passed down to the Sympson family; John Dyer Sympson, a solicitor from London built the castle as his home. It was completed in 1847 to a design by Augustus Pugin.[8] Having passed to Sir William Baker,[8] it was expanded and embellished in the 1880s by Sir Elskin Baker.[9]

The castle was bought and sold many times in the subsequent 100 years. In World War II it was taken over by the Royal Air Force and used as the headquarters for No. 955 Squadron, which was a barrage balloon unit and part of Balloon Command. The gatehouse was used by the local Air Raid Precautions.[8]

In 1956 the estate was sold to Simon and Phillipa Wills (of W.D. & H.O. Wills). Until 1988 the owners were Charles Skilton, a book and postcard publisher, and Jean Desebrock from South Africa. They sold it to William and Hugh Parsons who converted it into a hotel and restaurant.[8]

Architecture

Stone building with slit windows and battlements. Foreground is road with grass verges.
The gatehouse

The house has five windows in the three-storey main block between small circular turrets with other octagonal and hexagonal towers. In front of the house is a terrace with a trefoil pierced parapet with statutes of lions rampant with swords on embattled octagonal gate piers which flank six steps.[1]

The coachhouse has a tall circular turret and contained a granary on the first floor.[2] The gatehouse consists of a Chamfered double arch, with a parapet between circular embattled towers, with cast iron gates with heraldic motifs.[3] The walled kitchen garden, 170 metres (560 ft) south east of the house has another 4 metres (13 ft) tower.[10] The terrace adjoining the house leads to a decorative dairy.[4] The west garden walls include another tower.[5]

References

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