Green(s)leaves at Melford Hall

With its dramatic skyline of tall chimneystacks and fanciful octagonal turrets, Melford Hall is one of the finest and most satisfying Elizabethan houses in the East of England.

 

It stands beside the River Chad, at the northern end of Long Melford, a village noted for its wide village green leading up to the great perpendicular church.

 

Melford Hall is a mellow red brick house largely of the 16th century. It incorporates part of a medieval building held by the Abbots of Bury St Edmunds. They had used it as a seat for pleasure and relaxation from before 1065 until 1539.

 

Melford Hall's subsequent owner, Sir William Cordell, was a 'new man' of his time, and one of the most hospitable country gentlemen in Suffolk. He entertained Queen Elizabeth I at Melford Hall in 1578.

 

The 1580 map of Melford appears to show a rectangular house of four ranges laid out around a central courtyard. After an unsettled period, which included its looting during the Civil War, Melford Hall changed shape under the supervision of Sir Cordell Firebrace.

 

Firebrace, a descendant of the Cordells, removed the gatehouse wing, which formed the fourth side of the house, in about 1740. Left standing was the U-shaped building we see today.

 

A naval dynasty

 

Since 1786, Melford Hall has been the home of the Hyde Parkers, one of Britain’s most distinguished naval families.

 

In the early 19th century, Sir William Parker, 7th Baronet, and Sir Hyde Parker, 8th Baronet, commissioned the architect Thomas Hopper to remodel a number of Melford Hall's interiors in an austere Grecian style.

 

In 1813, Sir William Parker focussed his attentions on the Hall, Staircase and Library. And, in the 1840s Sir Hyde Parker invited Hopper back to complete the Drawing Room and double-height Saloon in the North Wing.

 

In the 1860s Sir William Parker, 9th Baronet, decided to re-cast Melford Hall in antiquarian guise. He carried out a number of alterations intended to evoke its medieval atmosphere.

 

The fire

 

During the Second World War, Melford Hall was requisitioned by the army. In 1942, a disastrous fire broke out in the North Wing, gutting it and destroying the roofs of the central wing.

 

In a far sighted act of preservation, unusual for the time, Sir William Hyde Parker, 11th Baronet, restored the house with the help of the architect Professor Sir Albert Richardson.

 

The interiors of the North Wing, including the Hyde Parker (Dining) Room, were re-built in a pared-down classical style. This new departure in design owed much to the Scandinavian inspired taste of Lady Ulla Hyde Parker, wife of the 11th Baronet.

 

Melford Hall, along with its 130 acres of parkland, was transferred to the National Trust in 1960.

 

For further information, please visit www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/...

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Uploaded on February 18, 2009
Taken on August 31, 2008