It would be hard to find a more romantic Jacobean English country house than Desmond MacCarthy's home, the Grade II* Wiveton Hall in Norfolk. Dating from the mid 17th century, it was built by John Gifford, a member of a mercantile family from Gloucester. The house, with its three storey, double-fronted flint façade surmounted by decorative Dutch gables, has an imposing symmetrical appearance, pleasantly contrasted by the naturalistic look of the grounds that surround it. Strolling through the woods, one comes across outcrops of topiary, a secluded pond and beyond a wrought-iron gate is a walled kitchen garden worthy of The Secret Garden.
Desmond's maternal Buxton grandparents bought the house in 1944 and it was his mother, Chloe, who was largely responsible for maintaining the Edwardian garden. Before the Second World War there were eight gardeners. My mother was still taking an interest in what was planted up until her death aged nearly 103. She was a very knowledgeable gardener and I remember whenever she went abroad on holiday she'd always return home with a hoard of cuttings, such as cistus from the south of France, or box from a monastery garden in China.'
Desmond was in his teens when he inherited Wiveton after both his grandparents and his father died within a year or two of each other. As children, my sister Mary and I lived with our parents in the self-contained Edwardian west wing next door to the main hall. After my grandparents died we moved into the main hall and my mother ran the farm until I was old enough to take it on myself. I don't think it ever crossed her mind to downsize and swap Wiveton for a smaller, easier-to-run place. She loved living here, she knew Mary and I did too, so on we went. I like to think that my children, Edmund and Isabel, might take it on in years to come.'
Esta historia es de la edición April 2022 de Homes & Antiques.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición April 2022 de Homes & Antiques.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
48 hours in FUNCHAL
Jenny Oldaker discovers Madeira's capital to be an elegant, artistic place with wide open spaces, verdant beauty spots and a picture-perfect sea-facing location...
LUKE HONEY'S Enthusiasms
On an autumn day in 1783, a sheep, a duck, and a rooster became the first living creatures to fly in a hot air balloon.
Collecting NUTCRACKERS
Not just for Christmas, these nostalgic keepsakes come in an abundance of novelty shapes and styles, offering character and affordability for budding collectors
WHY I COLLECT Medals
Oliver Miller, managing director of Bishop & Miller Auctioneers and Valuers, is fascinated by medals - for him it's all about the preservation of stories for future generations...
Fashionably CURATED
Roni Lang's home in Deal, situated above her clothing store, is every bit as creative and stylish as you'd expect from a fashion designer
Work life balance
Lucy and Guy Rutter - a ceramicist and artist respectively - have found the ideal place to live and work: a Victorian property in Faversham attached to a once-neglected studio...
Farm FUSION
A farmhouse near Cape Town has been given a rustic-meets-industrial makeover, using found materials and objects, as well as treasures brought back from afar
SAVVY Sophistication
Affordable and intriguing charity shop and eBay finds are teamed with statement pieces in this impressive Victorian home in West Yorkshire
DARREN APPIAGYEI
The wood artist talks to Dominique Corlett about seed pods, creative reinvention and the life-enhancing feeling of turning a lathe
Collecting Dioramas MINIATURE WORLDS
From elaborate taxidermy museum displays to humble folk art creations, a diorama can transport us to another time and place