About Me

Heritage Lincolnshire is running an innovative approach to managing heritage at risk by training and supporting a network of volunteer 'heritage stewards' to complete surveys on Lincolnshire's heritage assets including historic buildings, places of worship, parks and gardens, conservation areas and archaeological sites. Project Officers Michael Knapton and Natalie Hamilton, together with some of our keen Heritage Stewards, will be writing a weekly blog on the Heritage at Risk project which will provide updates on the latest news and goings on, as well as offering an insight in to the day to day running of the project and the experiences of our Heritage Stewards.

Monday 5 December 2011

Two Lincolnshire Stately Homes

Having been a volunteer Heritage Steward for around a year now I feel more confident in my ability to complete basic building surveys. Along with several other volunteers it seems, I have tended to avoid surveying parks and gardens. I think this is because of the potential “vastness” and relative uncertainty of the task. When surveying historic buildings their features and general condition are there to be seen whereas in the case of parks and gardens, more interpretation and often imagination, has to be used. Because of this avoidance I took advantage of the further Parks and Gardens training recently offered by the LHAR team.




Around 30 volunteers arrived at Little Ponton Hall on a foggy and cold November morning, where two knowledgeable guides drew our attention to features of the landscape that many of us would otherwise have no doubt, passed by, unaware. An example of this was the use made of various species of trees and shrubs in the original planning of the gardens and grounds. At Little Ponton Hall, a magnificent cedar was planted as an eye-catching feature that could be enjoyed by those viewing it from both the inside and outside of the building. Significance and virtue was apparently attached to certain trees and our guides informed us of times past when it was fashionable to plant particular species (for example, Scots Pine was popular in the mid C18.) Yews were evidently chosen to provide dense screens, often used deliberately to “delay” the view of the house until a break in the planting revealed it to its best advantage.

Walking towards the hall’s boundary to reach one of the better vantage points, our guides  invited us to look for hidden features including earlier garden plans and areas where walls and lakes were once situated. With their help in interpretation, previously “invisible” humps and bumps in the landscape suddenly took on new meaning!



Wandering into the hall’s kitchen garden I soon found myself in conversation with the head gardener who told me that the owners of the hall still liked to be presented with a daily list of fresh garden produce that was available for their table. Even at this late stage in the year, the garden was immaculately tended and obviously still producing vegetables; all of this with just three gardeners! A feature that took my attention was a huge mistletoe plant, thriving on an old apple tree cordon as its host. I was told that the plant had been there as long as anyone could recall and despite their best efforts to propagate, it refused to grow anywhere else!

After a couple of hours our party travelled the few miles to Stoke Rochford Hall. Our guides told us to expect a quite different environment to that we had found at Little Ponton. This was immediately apparent when we arrived. The hall and its grounds are on a far grander scale. The approach to the hall employs the natural features of the surrounding landscape and strategic tree planting heightens the visitors’ anticipation of seeing the hall for the first time. With the guides’ insightful commentary, the garden’s former features once again became clear. They took us to a secluded part of the grounds where much debate took place as to its former function. An extensive concreted area was thought to be what remained of a WW2 billet and supplies depot and a sunken grassed area was possibly a croquet lawn or a former parterre.


During our visit, the hall was receiving a visit from a team of window cleaners. Because of the hundreds of windows in the building, I imagined that here we might have an example of the “Forth Road Bridge” story; that once the task of washing the windows is completed, the whole process has to be repeated! A lucrative proposition for the window cleaners, I’m sure!

The training day then, was enjoyable and informative. It served to make the surveying of parks and gardens less daunting, setting in context the current landscape features with those that are less obvious, but visible to the observant. A worthwhile training event and another opportunity to meet fellow Heritage Stewards.

Colin, Heritage Steward