Registered Historic Park & Garden


Details


Reference Number
PGW(C)56(WRE)
Name
Bettisfield Hall  
Grade
II  
Date of Designation
01/02/2022  
Status
Designated  

Location


Unitary Authority
Wrexham  
Community
Maelor South  
Easting
346222  
Northing
335960  

Broad Class
Gardens, Parks and Urban Spaces  
Site Type
Part walled and part earthwork remains of formal terraced gardens  
Main phases of construction
Late sixteenth to early seventeenth century  

Description


Summary Description and Reason for Designation
Registered for the survival of the part walled and part earthwork remains of a Tudor/Jacobean terraced garden, as belonging to the Hanmer family in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. It was also possibly the home in his youth of the famous horticulturalist Sir Thomas Hanmer (1612-1678). The registered garden has group value with Bettisfield Hall (LB: 1639). Bettisfield Hall lies on the north side of the village of Bettisfield. The garden is situated to the west, south, and east of the house, on ground falling away gently to the east and west, and more steeply to the south. It is accessed by a modern gravel drive from the Bettisfield-Hanmer road to the west, which runs to a small forecourt on the north side of the house. The garden falls into two main sections: the terraces to the south and west of the house, and the former orchard to the south-east. The main, larger, terrace is rectangular and lawned, extending southwards from the north end of the house, and westwards to a scarp in the field west of the present garden. The south end of this terrace is built up over the slope and retained by a brick revetment wall. The garden is variously bounded by a beech hedge, the house itself, and by a brick wall at the south end of the house. The west and south walls are visible as slight bumps in the turf. It once had a 'knot garden' to the west of the house. Below the revetment on the west is another, narrow, terrace running alongside. Beyond the present garden the terrace continues across the pasture field to the west, with only scarps on the north and west sides indicating the original garden boundary walls. This entire, triangular, pasture field is now (2020) an orchard. To the south-east of the house, east of the main terrace, is a gently sloping pasture field with a few old fruit trees in it which was once part of the original gardens, probably an orchard. The garden probably dates to the time of Hanmer family occupation of the house in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth-centuries. Its formal style accords with this date, and after 1640 both house and garden remained largely untouched. Significant View: Views south across the rural landscape around Bettisfield. Sources: Cadw 1995: Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales, Clwyd, 216-8 (ref: PGW(C)36). Ordnance Survey, 25-inch map: sheet Flintshire XXVI.13 (second edition 1899).  

Cadw : Registered Historic Park & Garden [ Records 1 of 1 ]




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