Wednesday 14 September 2011

Berrington Hall

Dedicated to Richard and Ruth Lewis and their ‘passion’ for Downton Abbey.


















Do houses have their own peculiar curse? Robert Cecil, a thoroughly bad egg, invested a life of back-stabbing and ambition in Hatfield House. The building is magnificent inside and out, the Jacobean carving extraordinary in its artistry and detail. Walk inside and it takes your breath away, as it did for Cecil who died just before it was finished.

Sometimes bad luck can strike once and then it’s done. With other houses it’s a more drawn out affair.

















Berrington Hall with its own melancholy history is a case in point. It was built in 1778 by Thomas Harley, a wealthy banker and government contractor. The house was designed by Henry Holland. Capability Brown landscaped its parkland; and its interior, exquisitely proportioned, was opulent and warm. Thomas Harley had no sons. You can’t have everything, but his daughter, Ann, did marry the George, the son of the more famous Admiral Lord Rodney.




This man, whupped the Spanish, French and Americans? What were their commanders like? Seriously, Gainsborough reveals a lot in that face

















Lord Rodney had been a gifted naval commander who’d thrashed the Spanish, French and Americans in many naval encounters. He was also greedy, addicted to gambling and spent more than he owned – to the extent that he was forced to flee Britain in order to escape his creditors and spent some time in a French jail.

The Rodney family weren’t blessed with luck. Anne’s brother-in-law was lost at sea, and her three sons, the third, fourth and fifth Baron Rodneys died in 1842, 1843 and 1846 respectively. By the time the seventh Baron Rodney took up residence, Berrington Hall was the worst for wear and to make things worse he’d inherited the first Baron’s taste for gambling. Over the years Berrington was stripped of its farms and much of its treasures. The house was sold in 1901 to Frederick Cawley MP who’d made his wealth in the cotton industry.






















For a time everything went right for them. Frederick Cawley had patented a pure black dye and when, in 1901, Queen Victoria died, a nation went into mourning and clothed itself in black crepe. And Cawley became even richer. In 1906 he was made a baronet and Berrington hall prospered under his enlightened and energetic ownership.

Then in 1914 tragedy struck. World War One. Within a few months of war their son, John Stephen, was killed in action. He was thirty four. The family were still grieving when in 1915 their second son, Harold, died at Gallipoli. The youngest son, Oswald, was killed in 1918, just three months before the war ended.

It is well worth reading the link, describing each brother’s death.

The house has a small room where pictures of the Cawley family hang. They show faces that are down to earth and decent. Good men died and the parents never recovered. On the wall is a personal, handwritten letter from Winston Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty, commiserating with their grief. The letter is intimate and sincere on first reading.

But Captain Harold Cawley’s death is not without mystery. Initially he was Aide-de-Camp to General Sir William Douglas and enjoyed relative security in Divisional Head Quarters. From there he wrote a series of uncensored letters to his parents, describing in detail the poor calibre of the recruits from the Northern towns of Lancashire. More significantly he went on to describe, in caustic detail, the short comings of General Sir Ian Standish Monteith Hamilton, Lieutenant General Sir Aylmer Gould Hunter-Weston, and Major General Sir William Douglas, who he described as ‘peevish willie. The brunt of his criticism was that Generals were sacrificing men without reason but through sheer stupidity. Were their consequences?

The official line is that Captain Harold Cawley requested to be posted to the front - "I have always felt rather a brute skulking behind in comparative safety while my friends were being killed." He was granted his wish and two weeks later was killed.

A descendent, Charles Cawley, perhaps expressing a family tradition, has a different line. Harold’s letters were addressed to his father who was in the cabinet. More significantly they could be interpreted as criticism of Churchill who had masterminded the Gallipoli campaign. In Charles Cawley’s words :

“As a consequence, (Harold) left the general staff and went straight to the front line. The inevitable happened. It is more than possible that he knew exactly what he was doing and this was an act of virtual suicide.” Confronted with Churchill’s handwritten letter and the story as told by Charles Cawley, it is hard to be certain of where truth lies. But the grieving father was made a full baron, and money continued to roll in with a nation in mourning and the increased demand for black dye.

Harold Cawley
















During World War II Berrington Hall was turned into a hospital but the new Lord and Lady Cawley still dressed for dinner every night and retained stiff upper lips when the Americans arrived and churned up their park in their jeeps. When Lord Cawley died in 1957 a grateful nation charged death duties of 80% and they were forced to sell up, bequeathing their house to the Treasury and ultimately the National Trust. Lady Cawley was allowed residence there until she died, though she lived longer than anyone expected – dying a centenarian in 1978.





















Even then a degree of controversy lived on

13 comments:

Unknown said...

What a fascinating story. "...an act of virtual suicide." I wonder...

Perhaps houses do have their own curses after all.

Maria Zannini said...

That's a heck of a home. It even makes its own ghosts.

Mike Keyton said...

Shirley and Maria, I think people bring bad luck and make ghosts. Homes can be their repositery - or in terms of a throwaway phrase 'Psychic reliquaries.' :)

Claudia Zurc said...

Beautiful house indeed. But I don't think houses have a curse, people's bad energy do (whether dead or alive). :o)

Misha Gerrick said...

No kidding. Lots of pain and controversy for such a beautiful house.

Mike Keyton said...

Claudia, I tend to agree, though some of the great horror tropes go for the house :)

Misha, I reckon there's a good TV series waiting to be made on houses like this.

Roz Cawley said...

One wonders how any mother copes with the deaths of three sons.

Mike Keyton said...

Roz, as parents we are all hostages to fortune. You are right. It is heartbreaking. And may I say, you have a beautifully photographed blog!

Mike Keyton said...

Roz, I am slow on the uptake. Are you in anyway related to the Cawley's of Berrington Hall?

Anonymous said...

Yes, Mike - married to one of Vivienne's grandsons. We were at Berrington a few weeks ago - family wedding - and took back a photograph album of my husband's childhood holidays there. Many memories - for him and for me ;-). The house guides seemed to really enjoy looking at it and hearing the stories.
(Thank you for your kind comments re my blog, by the way :-)).
Warm Wishes,
Roz C.

Mike Keyton said...

Thanks for getting back to me, Roz. Blogs throw up some interesting connections. You may be interested in two more posts on 'Tredegar House' in Newport. It too has a fascinating history and is now part of the National Trust. It's history may be even more interesting than Berrington Hall - but perhaps not. If you google Record of a baffled spirit Tredegar House you'll probably find the two posts quite easily. The comments are intereting too : )

Anonymous said...

Roslyn Mary Cawley née Latham [b.1950 Newport, Monm; mother: Silcox] m. [1982 Tenbury, Worcs] Robin Alexander Cawley [b.1954 Lambeth; mother: Marsden] 2s. Hugh Edward [b.1984 Reading & Wokingham]; Timothy James [b.1987 Basingstoke]

Mike Keyton said...

Thank you for thIs, Anon