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Newby Hall is a country house beside the in the parish of in , . It is south-east of and south of , by which the manor of Newby was originally held. A Grade I , the hall contains a collection of furniture and paintings and is surrounded by extensive gardens. Newby Hall is open to the public.


History
The manor of Newby was originally held by the lords of Topcliffe Castle. In St Columba's Church at Topcliffe are several monuments to the Robinson family of Newby and . After the death of Sir John Crosland in 1670, the Crosland family sold the manor of Newby in the 1690s to Sir Edward Blackett, an MP for the constituency of Ripon. He demolished the existing manor house and in 1697 built a new mansion, reputedly with the assistance of Sir . In 1697, when visiting Newby, described it as "the finest house I saw in Yorkshire". Blackett was succeeded in 1718 by his son Edward, who, in turn, was succeeded by his nephew also called Edward, who in 1748 sold the estate to Richard Elcock (later Richard Elcock Weddell), to whose young son it passed in 1762.

William Weddell (1736–1792), an MP for the constituency of Malton, benefited from his great-uncle's South Sea Company fortune and improved and enlarged the house during the 1760s. The interior was remodelled, to the designs of several architects, including John Carr and . The building housed William Weddell's collection of Roman antiquities which he had brought back from Italy during 1764–5. Robert Adam died in 1792. William died in 1792, leaving the estate to Thomas Philip Robinson, Lord Grantham, who later changed his name to Thomas Weddell and was subsequently also known as Thomas de Grey, 2nd Earl de Grey. When he died in 1859, his titles passed to his nephew, George Robinson, 1st Marquess of Ripon, 2nd Earl of Ripon, but Newby Hall went to his daughter, Lady Mary Gertrude Robinson, who married Henry Vyner (1805–1861).

Lady Mary commissioned to build the Church of Christ the Consoler in the grounds in 1871–76 as a memorial to her son, who was killed by bandits in Greece in 1870. An equestrian statue brought to England by the Vyners and erected in London after the 1660 Restoration of the Monarchy, modified to depict Charles II trampling Cromwell, was re-erected at Newby in 1883. See Cultural depictions of Charles II of England for the history of this statue. Another son, Henry Frederick Clare Vyner (1836–1883), inherited Newby, followed by his brother, Robert Charles de Grey Vyner (1842–1915), who was succeeded by his daughter Mary Evelyn Vyner, who inherited Newby herself in 1915 and had married Lord Alwyne Compton in 1886. She died in 1957.


20th and 21st centuries
The present owners, the Compton family, are matrilineal descendants of . They have restored the property. The gardens, which have extensive herbaceous borders and woodland walks, were developed in their present form by Major Edward Compton, who took over Newby in 1921. His son, Major Robert Edward John (Robin) Compton (1922–2009) was chairman of for many years. He took over the running of Newby Hall in 1960, was appointed High Sheriff of North Yorkshire in 1978 and Deputy Lieutenant from 1981. In 1997, Robin Compton handed over the property to his younger son, Richard, his elder son James having inherited the Invercauld estate near in Scotland. His father, Major Edward (Robin) Compton, had married Sylvia Farquharson of Invercauld.

In 1973, a miniature railway was constructed; it was enlarged in 1985. Running along the bank of the river, a train is pulled by a Battison-built 1/5-scale model of the Royal Scot (6100) on Sundays and bank holidays. At other times the train is pulled by the Countess De Grey or Lady Mary Vyner, LPG-powered diesel-hydraulic locomotives designed by and built by .

The 2007 ITV/ film of Jane Austen's Mansfield Park was filmed at Newby Hall. It was also the location for Hundreds Hall in the 2018 film The Little Stranger. It was featured on an episode of An American Aristocrat's Guide to Great Estates on the Smithsonian Channel and Amazon Prime Video which first aired in 2020. Newby Hall was the venue for two episodes of ’s Antiques Roadshow filmed in 2020 and transmitted in January and April 2021.

In 2016, moved his Teddy bear museum to Newby Hall.

The hall holds the UK national collection of the genus (dogwoods). The collection was started in 1990 by the late Robin Compton, although some specimens date back as far as the 1930s. The oldest example is a fine planted by Robin Compton's father.


Architecture
The house is built of red brick with stone dressings, quoins, , and grey roofs. The original building has three storeys and fronts of nine and five bays; the original central entrance has been converted into a window. The current entrance is from the east, this front has projecting wings of two storeys and seven bays. The added north dining room has two storeys and fronts of three and two bays. The main entrance has a porch with paired columns, an , a , and a carved blocking course. Most of the windows in the house are .
(2026). 9780300126655, Yale University Press.


Other buildings

Skelton Lodges
At the eastern entrance to the grounds is a long symmetrical range of buildings. In the centre are double gates flanked by inner stone piers, outside which are railings, outer piers and ramped walls. These lead to two-storey square lodges with one bay and grey roofs, then screen walls containing gateways, leading to single-storey three-bay lodges. Outside these are screen walls with gateways ramped up to massive end piers. The wall, gates and lodges are collectively grade I listed.


Stables
North of the hall is a grade I-listed stable range. It is built of brick, faced in stone on two sides, with rusticated quoins, stone dressings and grey roofs. They form a quadrangular plan, with ranges of seven and nine bays. The eastern front has a central bay containing a round arch with a rusticated surround, and a triple keystone, flanked by round-headed niches, above which is a plaque and an oculus. The flanking bays have round-arched recesses with keystones and Diocletian windows above. On the roof is an octagonal with a dome and an elaborate .


Nidd Ferry Disaster Memorial
The grade II-listed memorial, which has been moved from its original site, commemorates those lost in an accident. It is in , and about high. It has a square base, and a round-arched recess on each side. Above are clustered columns, some with grape decoration. Around the columns are four mushroom-shaped , and on the top are ball and cushion finials.


See also
  • Grade I listed buildings in North Yorkshire (district)
  • Listed buildings in Newby with Mulwith


Gallery

Notes

Sources


External links

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