Baconsthorpe Castle


Baconsthorpe Castle, historically known as Baconsthorpe Hall, is a ruined, fortified manor house near the village of Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England. It was established in the 15th century on the site of a former manor hall, probably by John Heydon I and his father, William. John was an ambitious lawyer with many enemies, and built a tall, fortified house, but his descendants became wealthy sheep farmers and, less worried about any attack, developed the property into a more elegant, courtyard house, complete with a nearby deer park.

Remains

By the end of the 16th century, the Heydons were spending beyond their means and the castle had to be mortgaged; nonetheless, new formal gardens and a decorative mere were built alongside the house. Sir John Heydon III fought alongside the Royalists during the English Civil War and in retaliation was declared delinquent by Parliament in 1646. His fortunes did not recover and he began to demolish Baconsthorpe in 1650 in order to sell off its stonework. The outer gatehouse was turned into a private home and continued to be occupied until 1920, when one of its turrets collapsed. In the 21st century, the ruins of the castle are managed by English Heritage and open to visitors.
The remains of the castle comprise a moated inner court and mere to the north, with an outer court and an outermost court to the south. The main surviving buildings are the inner, fortified gatehouse, dating from the 15th century; the long building, used for wool manufacture; and the outer gatehouse, first built in the 16th century but considerably altered in later years. The outermost court holds part of the original barn, a large building that would have symbolised the Heydons' lordship of the manor.

History

15th century

Baconsthorpe Castle was established by the Heydon family in the 15th century. The village of Baconsthorpe lay between Holt and Norwich, and was named after the local Bacon family. The village had two manor houses, the first in the main village and the other, called Wood Hall, on the outskirts. William Baxton had come from a relatively humble background, but by around 1400 he had bought the Bacon family's lands in the area, including half of the Wood Hall estate. William probably began the construction of the castle, then termed Baconsthorpe Hall, starting to construct the moated platform and the inner gatehouse around 1460.
William's son, John Heydon I, continued to develop the property and acquire more land around the area, changing his family name in the process to disguise his lower social origin. John was initially the political client of the William de la Pole, the Duke of Suffolk; after the duke's death, John Dudley, the Earl of Warwick became his next patron. John was an ambitious lawyer, and came to be hated and feared across the region as his power increased. By the time of his death in 1479, the inner gatehouse was completed and work on the courtyard house begun, creating the basis of a tall, fortified house. The castle demonstrated John's political aspirations, and was intended to impress his peers in the region.
Sir Henry Heydon continued his father's work on the castle. Henry married into London money and became a wealthy sheep farmer, being knighted in 1485. He completed the castle's main house, service court and the north-east tower. In the process, perhaps being less worried than his father about any attack on his property, he altered the character of Baconthorpe to produce what the historians Jacky Hall and Paul Drury term an "upmarket, courtyard house".

16th century

Over the course of the 16th century, the Heydons became one of the leading families in Norfolk, marrying well, practising law and enjoying the profits from their sheep and the wool trade – their products were sold in England and also exported to the Netherlands. Sir John Heydon II inherited Baconsthorpe in 1504 but primarily lived at Saxlingham; after a pause in construction, he finished the construction of Baconsthorpe's north court and turned the east range of the castle into a wool factory before his death in 1550. His son, Sir Christopher I, then built the outer gatehouse and barn around 1560, and in 1561 was formally given a licence to crenellate the castle to create a deer park alongside the castle. The Heydons lived in lavish style, Sir Christopher maintaining a household of 80 servants and a coach with two horses.
The castle was inherited by Sir William Heydon II in 1579, but by now the wool trade was in decline and the family was building up debts. Sir William sold off parts of the estate to cover his father's debts, but William's business projects in London failed and he was forced to sell off further lands. Baconsthorpe was mortgaged and, under pressure from his creditors, William attempted to sell part of the estate in 1590. His son, Sir Christopher II, disagreed with this plan to dispose of what he regarded as his inheritance, and the father and son fell out. William threatened to demolish the castle, Christopher appealed to the Privy Council, and the matter went to court in 1593, a few months before William's death the same year.
Once he had inherited Baconsthorpe, Christopher renovated the inner gatehouse and created a large mere and a formal garden around the south-east side of the castle, although he mainly resided at Saxlingham. Christopher had little interest in business, preferring to engage in military pursuits and to study astrology – he hosted the mathematician Henry Briggs and the astronomer John Bainbridge at Baconsthorpe. Christopher had inherited debts of £11,000 from his father, in addition to his own debts of £3,000, and was fined £2,000 for his part in Essex's Rebellion of 1601. His financial situation did not improve and first Baconsthorpe, and then his other estates, had to be mortgaged.

17th – 21st centuries

Baconsthorpe passed to Christopher's eldest son Sir William in 1623, but William died four years later during the Île de Ré expedition, leaving it to his younger brother, Sir John III. John became the Lieutenant General of the Ordnance and, when civil war broke out in 1642, he fought on the side of King Charles I. In response, Parliament seized his lands and he was declared delinquent in 1646. He bought his estates back, but began to demolish Baconsthorpe around 1650 in order to sell off the stonework.
John died in debt in 1653, leaving the castle to his son, Charles Heydon, who continued to dispose of the stone: 29 cartloads were sold the following year for £30, for reuse at Felbrigg Hall. Charles' brother, William Heydon III, sold the estate to a Mr Bridges, and then onward to a doctor called Zurishaddai Lang, who lived in the outer gatehouse. The Norfolk landowner John Thruston Mott bought the estate in 1801, and the gatehouse continued to be occupied until 1920, when one of the turrets collapsed. Although the mere was still water-filled in 1839, it was subsequently drained.
In 1940, the castle's owner, the politician Sir Charles Mott-Radclyffe, placed the site into the care of the Ministry of Public Works. In the 1950s and 1960s, the site was cleared of ivy and other vegetation, the stonework consolidated and archaeologically surveyed, before being opened to the public. The mere was dredged and reflooded in 1972, with further archaeological excavations carried out. In the 21st century, Baconsthorpe Castle is managed by English Heritage and protected under UK law as a Grade I and Grade II listed building, and as a scheduled monument.

Architecture

Baconsthorpe Castle is located north of Baconthorpe village in a valley formed by the River Glaven, approached on the remains of a raised causeway from the south. The site comprises a moated inner court and mere to the north, with an outer and an outermost court to the south. During the 16th century, the surrounding area would have formed pasture for sheep, although it is now primarily used for arable farming.

Outer and outermostcourts

The outer and outermost courts lie progressively to the south of the outer court of the castle. The outermost court currently forms part of a farmyard and is now subdivided by a low wall. A 16th-century barn lines the western edge of the court. The barn is now in size, but was originally possibly up to long, with three sets of large cart doors. The barn was intended both to impress visitors and to symbolize the Heydons' lordship of the manor, and the exterior facings of the barn are superior on the south and east sides where they would have been seen by those entering the castle. A row of cottages would originally have faced the barn on the other side of the court.
The ruined outer gatehouse that forms the entrance to the outer court was built from expensive knapped flint in a Perpendicular Gothic style. It comprised a gate-passage, with rooms and octagonal turrets on either side and a large chamber on the first floor. When it was converted into a house in the 17th century, the gatehouse was heavily altered: a three-storey porch was added onto the front along with wings on either side, and additional rooms at the back of the building, but the porch was later removed in the early 19th century, when crenellations were added. A wall would originally have run around the outside of the outer court, which was used as a walled garden after the conversion of the gatehouse.

Inner court

The inner court rests on a square earth platform across, surrounded by a water-filled moat up to wide. The eastern edge of the moat meets with the 16th-century mere, approximately across, which is fed by two streams and dammed on the eastern side. Beyond the mere there are the remains of a large, dammed pond, across, which may originally have been designed to be a decorative water feature intended to be viewed from the castle. A bridge on the south side links the inner and outer courts; originally the second half of the bridge formed a protective drawbridge.
The inner court is in size, surrounded by an external curtain wall up to tall in places, protected by seven square and circular mural towers. The main entrance was through the southern bridge and the inner gatehouse, but the central north tower also originally held a postern gate, leading to another bridge over the northern edge of the moat, of which only the brick pier foundations survive. The castle was protected with gun loops: six double embrasures to the west of the gatehouse, a gun loop in the north-west square tower, and several larger gun loops in the northern section of the curtain wall. Inside the court, gun loops in the cellar beneath the hall covered the entrance itself. The military-inspired design of the inner court drew on earlier medieval architectural traditions, and was intended to reinforce the Heydons' status and symbolise their aspirations to nobility.
The inner gatehouse is three storeys high, and like the rest of the inner court, constructed of flint rubble and brick, faced with knapped flint. It has a gate-passage with a two-storey vaulted porch; two sets of chambers lay on either side of the passage, probably forming living space for the steward and the porter, and the rooms above were fitted with fireplaces, garderobes and a small chapel, to form a set of high quality, luxurious living space, possibly for the Heydons or members of their family. The building could have been defended in the case of an attack. The south-west corner of the inner court held a courtyard house, which was attached to the gatehouse and would have incorporated the castle's great hall. The northern part of the court would have probably formed a separate, private garden during the later period.
The north-east side of the inner court formed a service court, with kitchens and similar facilities, including a well. The eastern side of the inner court was adapted for the wool industry in the 16th century. This included the construction of a long building along the curtain wall, two storeys high,. This was used for processing wool, with a turnstile at the north end for shearing sheep, and space on the first floor for weavers and finishers; the southern end may have held a wooden sink for washing wool, or alternatively been a drying floor and granary for the castle's brewhouse and bakehouse. The three-storey north-east tower was also later used for processing wool, including fulling.

Garden

To the south-east off the inner court are the remaining earthworks of a formal garden on a raised platform, across. The garden had a raised walkway round a square pond, in size.