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© Mr Anthony Chapman
IoE Number:
136523
Location:
DOGMERSFIELD PARK (HOUSE),
DOGMERSFIELD, HART, HAMPSHIRE
Photographer:
Mr Anthony Chapman
Date Photographed:
17 October 2001
Date listed:
08 July 1952
Date of last amendment:
08 July 1952
Grade
I
NOTE - The Images of England website consists of images of listed buildings based on the statutory list as it was in 2001 and does not incoporate subsequent amendments to the list. For an updated version of the statutory list you should visit our LBOnline database http://lbonline.english-heritage.org.uk/Login.aspx
SU 75 SE DOGMERSFIELD DOGMERSFIELD PARK
9/57 Dogmersfield Park (House)
8.7.52
-
1728, late C18 early C19, late C19. The site of a medieval palace of the Bishop
of Bath and Wells, the older unit probably began as an Elizabethan house; there
is a large rectangular block facing the north east, and a late C18, early C19
wing, behind the west end forms with the earlier end elevation the second main
(north-west) front. Attached to the south east of this L-shape is a Victorian
structure,making an interior courtyard, now enclosed on its south east side by
a modern chapel. The north east front is a symmetrical 3-storeyed facade of
5:3:5 windows. Walling is in red brick (Flemish bond) with a plain stone coping
to a parapet, a moulded stone cornice which breaks into a pediment above the
slightly-projecting centrepiece, with an oval cartouche. Projecting brick bands
at 1st and 2nd floors, a plinth, flat rubbed arches and stone cills. Sash
windows, some with exposed frames, others in reveals: the 3rd and 4th on the
north side (lst floor) are French windows leading on to a stone balcony on 4
brackets and with wrought iron rails. The second bay from each end comprises
a stone niche on the 1st and 2nd floors, the lower containing a carved stone
female figure and the upper an urn. Seven carved urns surmount the parapet.
The central doorway (late C18) is in a fine white stone and has an architrave
(surrounding double doors), pilasters and a pediment in a Tuscan order. The
north west front is asymmetrical, with a 2 storeyed 'centrepiece' of 3 windows,
projecting slightly, having a pediment containing a carved stone coat of arms,
full mouldings and moulded stone cornices above the ground floor windows. To
the north the 3-storeyed design has 1:3:1 windows: to the south the 2-storeyed
arrangement continues from the centre with 3:1 windows. Walling is red brick,
with a projecting 1st floor band at the centre and to the south, rubbed flat
arches, stone cills, plinth, and decorative stone cheeks to two sets of 3 steps,
giving access to French windows at the centrepiece and in the centre of the
northern half. The southern flank of this front has 2:3 storeys with 1:1:2
windows. The eastern flank of the north east front is of 3 storeys, with set
back parts, of 3:1:0:1 windows: the 3 windows of the ground floor infill a former
3 arch colonnade. Good interiors; sumptious plasterwork, fireplaces. The chapel
contains a set of stations of the Cross sculpture, by Eric- Gill.