Latitude: 51.0859 / 51°5'9"N
Longitude: -1.0094 / 1°0'33"W
OS Eastings: 469477
OS Northings: 132305
OS Grid: SU694323
Mapcode National: GBR B8Q.X6W
Mapcode Global: FRA 86S7.SPQ
Plus Code: 9C3W3XPR+86
Entry Name: Rotherfield Park
Listing Date: 18 July 1986
Grade: I
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1351139
English Heritage Legacy ID: 142967
ID on this website: 101351139
Location: East Hampshire, GU34
County: Hampshire
District: East Hampshire
Civil Parish: East Tisted
Traditional County: Hampshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Hampshire
Church of England Parish: East Tisted with Colemore St James
Church of England Diocese: Winchester
Tagged with: English country house
EAST TISTED ROTHERFIELD PARK
SU 63 SE
4/1 Rotherfield Park
1
Country mansion. 1815-21, by Joseph Parkinson, with alterations and extensions
of the mid to late C19. Stone walls, with unobtrusive slate roofing. On an
old site, the building was designed in Tudor/Gothic style, of irregular form
and outline, with stuccoed elevations; this was re-modelled in the late C19,
with more elaborate Victorian/Tudor refacing in Bath stone, so that the general
Romantic form of the original remains, expressed in bolder detail. Square
structure of 2 storeys, with a lower range west of the south elevation, with
3 storeyed towers at each corner, the south east being a slender octagonal
turret and the others massive square blocks. East elevation: (between the
towers) comprises 2 bow-shaped full-height bays on either side of a central
rectangular bay. Pepperpots to the towers, parapets, 1st floor band, plinth,
mullion and transome stone windows. North elevation: contains the entrance
porch: here again the general form repeats the original but the detail of this
3 storeyed range is plain Jacobean; pierced parapet, hood moulds, mullions,
plinth. An elaborate porch in a Doric Order, oval arch with keystone, recessed
entrance with a Jacobean doorway. South elevation: continues the Victorian
proportions of the features, but the west side is a lower range, having on the
ground floor an arcade (or cloister) of Tudor arches on octagonal columns,
enclosing quadripartite (plaster) vaulting, and ending in a church-like brick
tower of 3 stages with diagonal comer buttresses. The west side of the
building is a mixture of later and altered units, of brickwork in Jacobean
style, with a small section of crenellated (original?) parapet. Entrance to
the rear (west) from the north forecourt is via a 2 storeyed wing which is
pierced by an oval gateway, dated 1891. Decoration scheme of 1870's retained
in hall with stencilled decorations throughout and in both big and little
drawing rooms (ref. Country Life of 23 and 30 April, and 7 May, 1948).
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