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Benham Park
Marsh Benham, Berkshire
The
manor of Benham-Valence, which derives its additional appellation from the
family of Valence, Earls of Pembroke, after passing through various
ownerships, was granted by Queen Elizabeth I to "her faithful
servant,'' John Baptist Castillion. His son, Sir Francis Castillion, sold
the manor in 1630 to the trustees of Sir William Craven, from whom it
passed through several stages of family descent to William, 6th Baron
Craven, who had the present house built following the destruction of the
previous structure in a disastrous fire. It was erected in 1775
under the direction of Henry Holland, in collaboration with his
father-in-law, the great English landscape artist 'Capability' Brown. Lord Craven married,
Elizabeth, youngest daughter of Augustus, 4th Earl of Berkeley, who
married as her second husband the Margrave of Anspach. The manor of Benham-Valence
was left by Lord Craven to his eldest son, who was created Viscount
Uffington and Earl of Craven, 13th June, 1801, from whom it was purchased
by the Margrave, who died at Benham in 1806, and bequeathed the estate to
the Margravine.
The
house which was much enlarged in the late Victorian period, is an imposing
building of the Ionic order, having an elegant portico in the south front,
and stands at the head of a slight declivity. On the south is a fine sheet
of water supplied by the Kennet, and on the North side the grounds are
well sheltered by woods, around which the great high-road makes a sweep to
the western gate.
Benham
Park was converted for use as offices in 1983 and was last offered for
sale by Hillier Parker & FPD
Savills in 1998.
Edited from Walter Money's
"History of Newbury" (1905)
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