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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Haynes_Park
rdf:type
dbo:Building geo:SpatialThing wikidata:Q41176 dbo:ArchitecturalStructure owl:Thing
rdfs:label
Haynes Park
rdfs:comment
Haynes Park is a Georgian country house which stands in parkland at Haynes Church End, Bedfordshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building. Originally known as Hawnes Park it was built c.1725 for John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville, a prominent statesman and remodelled and expanded several times since by his descendants. It is constructed of red and white brick to a square plan in two storeys with attics and slate roofs. Later extensions formed a courtyard. The south front has 13 bays in a 3-7-3 formation surmounted by a parapet, the two outer bays projecting in 2-storey bows. It stands in an estate which today comprises some 800 acres (320ha) of parkland and woodland.
foaf:name
Haynes Park
dbp:name
Haynes Park
geo:lat
52.06320190429688
geo:long
-0.4260999858379364
foaf:depiction
n16:Hawnes,_Haynes_Church_End_(geograph_3340940).jpg
dbo:location
dbr:Haynes_Church_End
dcterms:subject
dbc:Country_houses_in_Bedfordshire dbc:Grade_I_listed_buildings_in_Bedfordshire
dbo:wikiPageID
58565418
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
954458464
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dbr:Goscombe_John dbr:John_Thynne,_3rd_Baron_Carteret dbr:John_Granville,_1st_Earl_of_Bath dbr:Haynes_Church_End dbr:Stowe,_Kilkhampton dbr:Sir_George_Carteret,_1st_Baronet dbr:Bath,_Somerset dbr:Monkton_Combe_School dbr:Beechwood_Park_(mansion) dbr:Dean_of_Westminster dbc:Country_houses_in_Bedfordshire dbr:John_Carteret,_2nd_Earl_Granville dbr:Clarendon_School_for_Girls dbr:Abergele dbr:English_country_house dbr:Grade_I_listed dbr:Grade_I_listed_building dbr:Radha_Soami_Satsang_Beas dbr:Lord_John_Thynne dbc:Grade_I_listed_buildings_in_Bedfordshire dbr:Georgian_architecture dbr:George_Carteret,_1st_Baron_Carteret
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n16:Hawnes,_Haynes_Church_End_(geograph_3340940).jpg?width=300
dbp:architecturalStyle
dbr:Georgian_architecture
dbp:buildingType
dbr:English_country_house
dbp:completionDate
c.1725
dbp:designations
dbr:Grade_I_listed
dbp:location
Haynes Church End, Bedfordshire
dbp:material
Brick with slate roof
georss:point
52.0632 -0.4261
dbo:abstract
Haynes Park is a Georgian country house which stands in parkland at Haynes Church End, Bedfordshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building. Originally known as Hawnes Park it was built c.1725 for John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville, a prominent statesman and remodelled and expanded several times since by his descendants. It is constructed of red and white brick to a square plan in two storeys with attics and slate roofs. Later extensions formed a courtyard. The south front has 13 bays in a 3-7-3 formation surmounted by a parapet, the two outer bays projecting in 2-storey bows. It stands in an estate which today comprises some 800 acres (320ha) of parkland and woodland. The estate passed down to John Thynne, 3rd Baron Carteret, who died childless, leaving it to his nephew Lord John Thynne, sub-Dean of Westminster, thence to his eldest son Francis John Thynne, who was lord of the manors of Kilkhampton, Stratton and Binhamy in Cornwall. Stowe House in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, had been the seat of John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath (1628–1701), which manor had descended to his third daughter Lady Grace Granville, suo jure 1st Countess Granville (3 September 1654 – 18 October 1744), wife of George Carteret, 1st Baron Carteret of [Haynes Park, and mother of John Carteret, 2nd Baron Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville. The progeny of this marriage, Barons Carteret, Earls Granville, and Marquesses of Bath (Thynne), were co-heirs to William Granville, 3rd Earl of Bath (1692–1711) who died of smallpox aged 19 without progeny when the earldom became extinct. Haynes Park was the home of Rev. Lord John Thynne (1798–1881), DD, Canon of Westminster, (whose monument with effigy survives in Westminster Abbey), 3rd son of Thomas Thynne, 2nd Marquess of Bath. He inherited it from his childless uncle John Thynne, 3rd Baron Carteret (1772–1849). Francis Thynne's younger brother was Rev. Arthur Thynne (1833–1908), Rector of Kilkhampton, and a Canon of Truro Cathedral, of the newly built Penstowe House, Kilkhampton. Francis Thynne's second son was Lt Col. Algernon Carteret Thynne (1868–1917), DSO, Royal North Devon Hussars, of Penstowe, Kilkhampton, who was killed in action in Palestine during World War I, and whose monument by Sir William Goscombe John R.A. (1860–1952) survives in Kilkhampton Church. His widow (Anita) Constance Thynne (1871–1961), JP, lived on at Penstowe until her death in 1961. Algernon Thynne's brother and heir was George Thynne of Trelana, Poughill, who sold Penstowe in 1963. In 1908 Haynes Park was the residence of Mr. W. B. Greenfield (by apparent co-incidence "Greenfield" was the spelling adopted by the Grenville family during the 16th century), formerly tenant of Beechwood Park, Dunstable, and still contained a notable collection of portraits of Grenvilles, Carterets, and Thynnes, including John Grenville, 1st Earl of Bath (1628–1701), Sir Richard VIII Grenville (1542–1591) "of the Revenge", dated 1571, Sir Bernard Grenville (1567–1636), his son, and Sir Bevil Grenville (1596–1643), his great-grandson, killed at the Battle of Lansdowne. A portrait also existed there of Sir George Carteret, 1st Baronet (c.1610–1680), Governor of Jersey, who purchased Haynes in 1667 and whose grandson was the husband of Lady Grace Grenville. In 1929 the house became a boarding school for girls known as Hawnes Girls School which closed in 1975 and was then taken over by Clarendon School for Girls after their previous premises at Abergele had been destroyed in a fire. After Clarendon School merged with Monkton Combe School near Bath, Somerset in 1992 the property was sold to the Radha Soami Satsang Beas British Isles (RSSB), an Indian sect and is still (2019) still occupied by the associated organisation Science of the Soul.
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6184
dbo:buildingEndDate
c.1725
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dbr:Georgian_architecture
dbo:type
dbr:English_country_house
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wikipedia-en:Haynes_Park
geo:geometry
POINT(-0.42609998583794 52.063201904297)