Tabley House Collection Trust
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Tabley House Collection Trust Summary
- Address: Tabley House, Knutsford, WA16 0HB (Map)
- Tel: +44 (0)1565 750151
- Fax: +44 (0)1565 653230
- Owner: The University of Manchester
- Administrator: Lindsey Harrison
- E-mail: Click here to contact
- Website: Go to the Tabley House Collection Trust website
Tabley House Collection Trust Description
Tabley is the only 18th century Palladian country house in Cheshire; many famous painters such as JMW Turner, Henry Thompson and James Ward stayed at Tabley, today, important works by them can be seen in the rooms for which they were created, together with fine paintings by Dobson, Lely, Reynolds, Cotes, Northcote, Callcott, Fuseli, Lawrence and Martin.
Tabley House was designed by John Carr of York for Sir Peter Byrne Leicester, Bt, and completed around 1767; with its nine-bay central block facing south, flanked by pavilions and quadrant passages set well back and splendid Doric portico reached by curved stairs. Sir Peter‘s son, Sir John Fleming Leicester, Bt., later 1st Lord de Tabley, was the first great patron and collector of British paintings. He assembled a splendid collection at Tabley and in his London house during the first decade of the 19th Century, ultimately with the intention of establishing a National Gallery of British Art.
The following rooms are open to the public:
The Old Entrance Hall, - the "Portico Room" - with its handsome white chimney piece procured from Yorkshire, provided the main entrance to the house in Carr's design, as it does today. The work of Yorkshire craftsmen - the plasterer Thomas Oliver and the wood carvers Daniel Shillito and Mathew Bertram - is well represented here and in the other rooms.
The Drawing Room was originally designed by Carr as the Dining Room and is in plan the mirror-image of his Drawing Room in the south-west of the central block. The simple Jonesian design for the ceiling, enriched by Thomas Oliver's naturalistic plasterwork, was intended to complement the room's original function. The white chimney piece supplied by Carr is the finest in the house.
The Common Parlour is the most characteristic example of Carr's style of interior design surviving at Tabley. Its original function was to provide a link between the 'public' rooms at the front and 'private' bedrooms and dressing rooms at the back of the house. It provides the counterbalance, both functionally and in terms of the bows in the east and west fronts, to the original Library, located where the central bay of the Gallery is today. Restrained plaster work in Rococo style by Oliver decorates the ceiling.
The Dining Room was created in 1840-45 when the wall dividing the easternmost dressing room from the adjoining bedchamber was removed. The fireplace, by George Bullock, made from Anglesey marble, replaces the original bed- or dressing room fireplace.
The Oak Hall is named for the oak trees that grew on the site prior to 1760. The leisurely ascent of the cantilevered mahogany staircase, with its triple balusters, is typical of Carr. The grandeur of the space is reinforced by the crisp carving of the mahogany by Shillito and Thomas Oliver's plasterwork.
The Gallery is one of the great rooms of Cheshire. It incorporates the Drawing Room, Library and a bedroom and dressing room from Carr's original design. Its evolution is not yet fully researched, but it appears that its development started at the end of the 18th Century, was substantially completed by 1814 and was modified further in 1840-45. The wallpaper is a modern reproduction derived from the original.
St. Peter's Chapel and the Old Hall Room: the Chapel was built in 1675-8 on the island in the lower mere, called The Moat, adjacent to the former Tabley Hall - the "Old Hall", which dated from ca. 1380. It was moved to its present location in 1927 when the foundations of both the Chapel and the Old Hall were undermined by brine-pumping. The Old Hall Room - now the Tea Room - was built in 1927 to connect the Chapel to the House. The Old Hall was abandoned and is now ruinous.
For enquiries about visiting Tabley, just Click Here.
Weddings and Conferences:
Tabley House is a Grade 1 mansion set in delightful parkland is ideal for civil ceremonies. The elegant licensed rooms, overlooking the lake, are reached via a splendid staircase. After marrying in the Great Gallery with its magnificent pictures, furniture and flamboyance, couples can entertain, using their own suppliers, during the photocalls, and can then leave for their reception elsewhere or a marquee location in the grounds. Privacy, freedom of choice and M6 proximity makes Tabley somewhere very special.
Tabley is also an ideal and distinctive venue for small conferences and meetings.
Opening Times - 2012
House:
- 1st April - 31st October: Thursday - Sunday & Bank Holidays, 2 - 5 pm
- Last entry at 4.30 pm
Tearoom:
- Open all year: Thursday - Sunday, 11 am - 6 pm
Admission Prices - 2012
- Adult - £4.00
- Child - £1.50
- Students (with ID) - £1,50
- Groups (40+) - 10% discount, please contact for further details
Further information including opening times and pricesEvents for Tabley House Collection Trust
- The Deconet String Quartet - 21 June 2012
7.30 pm: A potpourri of music for strings by Dvorak, Mozart, Glazanov and many more! With Louise Latham (violin), deputy lead violin with the National Chamber Orchestra, Nicola Bright (violin), Mary Anderson (viola) and Mary Dainton (cello). Wine and nibbles served. - Tabley Summer Concert - 12 July 2012
7.30 pm: An evening of opera, strawberries and bubbly with Denise Leigh (winner of The English National Opera/C4 Operatunity) accompanied by husband Stefan Andrusyschyn.
Your Reviews of Tabley House Collection Trust
Jan Krynski (05 August 2011)
I visited this stately home with my partner and friends on my birthday due to rain changing our plans. For once I was glad of the bad weather, as otherwise I would perhaps not have found this lovely place. Anyone who loves art and architecture not to mention beautiful furniture can happily spend an enjoyable afternoon here admiring it. The experience is enhanced by being able to get up close and personal with the collection and by the wonderfully knowledgeable volunteers who share their enthusiasm for the place while telling you its history.
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Additional Info for Tabley House Collection Trust
Groups
Weddings
Disabled Access
Refreshments
Picnics
Guides
Meals Available
Conferences
Filming
Shop
Car Parking
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