Country & Town House - August 2018

Page 80

LORD OF THE GAMES As The Game Fair celebrates its 60th birthday this year so too does its host, Ragley Hall’s ninth Marquess of Hertford. Here, he looks back at the estate whose fortunes have varied over the years

W

hen Henry Jocelyn Seymour, the ninth Marquess of Hertford, celebrated his 60th birthday on 6 July, the British peer was also marking two other notable 60th anniversaries. Ragley Hall, the Warwickshire stately home he inherited from his father in 1991, will have been open to the public for 60 years this summer, and the estate will be hosting one of his favourite events, The Game Fair, for its own 60th anniversary. For Lord Hertford, the remarkable coincidence has given him time for reflection as much as celebration. Here, he looks back on the history of his family’s estate, explains how it has changed and why it is the perfect place to be hosting the world’s biggest and best countryside festival.

Ragley Hall will have been open to the public for 60 years this summer. How much has it changed in that time? It was completed in the middle of the 18th century but didn’t open to the public until 1958. It is a Grade I listed property, so the building itself hasn’t changed much at all. If Robert Hooke, who designed the building in 1680, was to come up the drive today he would say, ‘Yes, that’s the house I built’. But you will notice quite a few Brazilian touches. My wife is now a naturalised UK citizen, but she was born in Brazil. She has added a few palm trees and a Brazilian flag, which stand out a bit. However, we have found that plants that grow well in Brazil do not do so well over here.

Who have been your most notable visitors to Ragley Hall over the years? What I have been surprised about is the number of people who visit Ragley. Not so much in disguise, but undeclared. Some people come under the radar just to get a feel for it and we don’t know they are here. Going back, the

FROM ABOVE: Ragley Hall and its wonderful roses; Henry Seymour, the ninth Marquess of Hertford and his wife Beatriz; the Great Hall

most frequent royal visitor here was the Prince Regent, later to become King George IV, who is alleged to have had an affair with the wife of the second Marquess.

The State Rooms have been gradually restored to their former glory since 1958. What did that involve? A lot of work was needed. There was a huge gap between the death of the sixth Marquess in 1912 and my parents moving in in 1956. The house was unoccupied during that time. The sixth Marquess had virtually bankrupted the Ragley estate. He certainly disincentivised the next one, so the house was managed, or I should say mis-managed, by a bunch of lawyers and accountants. A lot of land was sold off, but the estate was big enough to be able to handle that. Because no one was really living in the house it decayed to such an extent that I believe that when my parents moved in in 1956 only three rooms were habitable. So an extensive renovation had to be carried out which lasted from 1956

78 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.CO.UK | August 2018

P00-Ragley-Hall.indd 78

27/06/2018 12:27


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.