Hurn Court in Hurn near Christchurch, Dorset, was the home of the Earls of Malmesbury between 1795 and 1951. It was sold on the death of the 5th Earl and opened as a boarding school for boys in 1952, before being developed for housing in the 1990s. It has been a Grade II* Listed building since 1964.
The roof is pitched and slated with a parapet, and contains a fourth, attic, floor with dormer windows. The other windows are casement with Hood mould and mullions. The outer wings of the E-shaped main block are coped and have . The main entrance has a two-storey porch with and a gable which incorporates a typanum and cartouche. The pillars of the main gate were originally topped with matching herons but these have since been replaced with urns.
Today, the 12-acre site has 35 private dwellings, eight in the main house, the others in external buildings such as coach house, stable block and cottages.
Other parts considered to be of architectural importance include, the stable blocks, listed on 22 May 1975, and ice house, and the walls around the courtyard and enclosed garden, listed on 12 February 1976. All were given grade II status.
Hurn Court and the 30-acre grounds was the inspiration for Rookington House and Park in Thomas Hardy’s 1876 story, The Hand of Ethelberta.
The First Earl of Malmesbury would later remark, "All classes contributed to its support, the farmers lent their teams and labourers, and the gentry openly connived at the practise and dealt with the smugglers".Platt p. 18
The second earl resided almost exclusively at Hurn Court where he revelled in hunting the local fauna; much of which he had stuffed and displayed at the house. He had the house extended considerably with another wing and a third storey, and added a drawing room in memory of his wife who had died in an accident. In 1820, he renamed the house, Heron Court.Young p. 198
About 1824, the earl imported a dog from New Foundland, which, as a strong swimmer, made an excellent gun dog. He was the first person in the UK to acquire and breed such a dog, which he renamed, Labrador.
In 1841, the house passed to the third earl of Malmesbury. When the railway first came to Christchurch in 1862, the route chosen for it cut through several miles of the Malmesbury estate. As a condition, the earl demanded that two stations be provided: one at Hurn, for him and his family, and a second at Avon Lodge, for his staff. The line closed in 1935 and the track was removed but both stations still exist: Hurn as a hotel and Avon Lodge as a private residence.
The third earl died childless in May 1889, leaving his title, estate and Heron Court to his nephew, Edward Harris.
At the beginning of the first world war, refugees from Belgium began arriving in England, around 20 were sheltered at Heron Court, with a further 20 staying elsewhere in the village. The house, at that time, was occupied by 5th Earl of Malmesbury and his wife, Dorothy Gough-Calthorpe, daughter of Augustus Gough-Calthorpe, 6th Baron Calthorpe. In 1935, the house reverted back to its original name of Hurn Court.Young p. 198 Lady Malmesbury was the president of the Hampshire branch of the Red Cross and during World War II, part of the building was used as its headquarters.
Hurn Court remained the seat of the Earls of Malmesbury until the death of the fifth earl in 1950. The contents were auctioned in October that year, and the house and grounds were sold in 1951. It reopened as a boys' school in 1952.
The school closed on 15 December 1989. The site was sold and developed for housing in the 1990s with the main building being converted into six apartments.
History
Smuggling
The Earls of Malmesbury
Hurn Court School
Citations
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