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Quarwood or Quar Wood is a Victorian manor near , , . It was formerly owned by 's bassist .


Description
The Gothic house is built on a hill in Lower Swell,
(1989). 9780300053203, Yale University Press. .
approached by a long driveway accessed from the A429 Stow Hill (the Fosse Way) and through an entrance with two stone pillars decorated with lion plinths. The house, which includes a and open , has 55 rooms.

The main hallway features a with wrought-iron and oak handrail which leads to a galleried landing. A formal drawing room has an open fireplace with a timber surround. The Cotswold landscape is visible through picture windows, and formal gardens include terraces and a croquet lawn facing south toward the river valley. When Entwistle bought the home, he installed two recording studios, one on the main floor and one on the top floor, and a bar with game rooms. Known for a macabre sense of humour, Entwistle kept skeletons in the master bedroom to frighten guests.

The grounds enclose 42 , including parkland, fish ponds, paddocks, garages, woodlands and seven cottages.


History
The house was designed by architect John Loughborough Pearson and built in 1856–59 for £8,000 () for Reverend Robert William Hippisley, who was the local parish priest
(2025). 9781472129376, Little, Brown and Company. .
(rector) (1844–1899). The parish's lucrative farming and across its provided a then-record salary for that parish of £525 by 1870. Pearson had previously designed in for Robert Raikes (1818–1901), Hippisley's brother-in-law and grandson of , a wealthy minister who increased junior education during and after the Industrial Revolution through expanding a nationwide charity for . Pearson had completed restoration work on St Edward's Church.

Quarwood was extensively remodeled in 1954–58 by Sir Denys Lowson. John Entwistle and his wife Alison bought the property as a weekend retreat in 1976, and Entwistle occupied the house until his death in 2002. In 2004 his son Christopher offered the house for sale at a price of £3.75 million (). The house is currently owned by Piet Pulford.


See also
  • List of non-ecclesiastical works by J. L. Pearson

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