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Althorp
Althorp
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Althorp (popularly pronounced /ˈɔːlθɔːrp/ AWL-thorp) is a Grade I listed stately home and estate in the civil parish of Althorp, in West Northamptonshire, England of about 13,000 acres (5,300 ha).[a] By road it is about 6 miles (9.7 km) northwest of the county town of Northampton and about 75 miles (121 km) northwest of central London,[3] situated between the villages of Great Brington and Harlestone. It has been held by the Spencer family for more than 500 years, and has been owned by Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer since 1992. It was also the home of Lady Diana Spencer (later Princess of Wales) from her parents' divorce until her marriage to Charles, Prince of Wales (later King Charles III).

Key Information

Althorp is mentioned as a small hamlet in the Domesday Book of 1086 as "Olletorp", and by 1377 it had become a village with a population of more than fifty people. By 1505 there were no longer any tenants living there, and in 1508, John Spencer purchased Althorp estate with the funds generated from his family's sheep-rearing business. Althorp became one of the prominent stately homes in England. The house dates to 1688, replacing an earlier house that was once visited by Charles I. The Spencer family amassed an extensive art collection and other valuable household items. During the 18th century, the house became a major cultural hub in England, and parties were regularly held, attracting many prominent members of Great Britain's ruling class. George John, 2nd Earl Spencer, who owned Althorp between 1783 and his death in 1834, developed one of the largest private libraries in Europe at the palace, which grew to over 100,000 books by the 1830s.[b] After falling on hard times, John Spencer, 5th Earl Spencer, known as the Red Earl, in 1892 sold much of the collection to Enriqueta Rylands, who was building the University of Manchester Library. Many of Althorp's furnishings were sold during the twentieth century, and between 1975 and 1992 alone approximately 20% of the contents were auctioned.

The house at Althorp was a "classically beautiful" red brick Tudor building, but its appearance was radically altered, starting in 1788, when the architect Henry Holland was commissioned to make extensive changes. Mathematical tiles were added to the exterior, encasing the brick, and four Corinthian pilasters were added to the front. The grand hall entrance to the house, Wootton Hall,[c] was cited by Sir Nikolaus Pevsner as "the noblest Georgian room in the county". The great dining room in the east wing extension of the house was added in 1877 to designs by John Macvicar Anderson, its walls hung with faded, red damask silk. Numerous fireplaces and furnishings were brought to Althorp from Spencer House in London during the Blitz for safekeeping and still remain. The Picture Gallery stretches for 115 feet (35 m) on the first floor of the west wing, and is one of the best remaining examples of the original Tudor oak woodwork and ambiance in the mansion. It has an extensive collection of portraits, including Anthony van Dyck's War and Peace, a John de Critz portrait of James I, a Mary Beale portrait of Charles II, and many others. Some £2 million was spent on redecorating the palace in the 1980s, during which time most of the religious paintings of Althorp were sold.

In total, the grounds of Althorp estate contain 28 listed buildings and structures, including nine planting stones. The former falconry, now a Grade I listed building, was built in 1613. Gardener's House is listed as a Grade II* listed building in its own right, as are the Grade II listed West and East Lodges. The mustard-yellow Grade II* listed stable block, designed by architect Roger Morris with a Palladian influence,[7] was ordered by Charles, 5th Earl of Sunderland in the early 1730s. The French landscape architect André Le Nôtre was commissioned to lay out the park and grounds in the 1660s, and further alterations were made during the late 18th century under Henry Holland. Following the death of Diana, Princess of Wales in 1997, she was interred on a small island in the middle of the ornamental Round Oval lake. A Doric-style temple with Diana's name inscribed on top, situated across from the lake, is a tourist attraction during July and August when the house and estate are open to the public, although the exhibition centre, situated in the old stable block, closed permanently in 2013.

Etymology

[edit]

A manor existed at Althorp in medieval times. It was referred to in the Domesday Book as "Olletorp", meaning Olla's Thorp, believed to refer to a medieval lord named Olla.[8] Thorp is a word of Scandinavian origin, which would have been pronounced as "throop" or "thrupp", and in Danish probably meant "daughter's settlement". In the 13th and 15th centuries it was recorded as "Holtropp" and "Aldrop", although when the estate was bought by John Spencer in 1508 it began to be referred to as "Oldthorpe".[8]

The name today is properly pronounced as "Awltrupp", which is not officially recognised on paper and by the media. The current owner, Charles Spencer,[d] noted that none of his family refer to it as Althorp, and that his father insisted on pronouncing it "Awl-trupp". When he assumed ownership in 1992, the BBC Pronunciation Department contacted him and the current "Awl-thorp" was agreed upon.[9]

History

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Early history

[edit]

A hamlet named Althorp existed here in medieval times, believed to have been situated on the southwest side of the park, east of West Lodge. It was first mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 as having a population of ten at the time, and being part of the parish of Brington. It was officially designated as an "extra parochial district" for centuries under the New Bottle Grove Hundred of Brington,[10] but by 1874 it was being cited as an independent civil parish.[e] 21 residents were documented in 1327, and in 1377 fifty people were reported to have paid Poll Tax over the age of 14.[12] During the 15th century the population of the village diminished, and in 1505 there were no longer any tenants living there. By 1577 most of the land was converted into four substantial sheep pastures.[12]

In 1469 John Spencer's uncle – also named John Spencer – had become feoffee (feudal lord) of Wormleighton in Warwickshire and a tenant at Althorp in Northamptonshire in 1486. The family's administration of their Northamptonshire and Warwickshire estates gained them admiration and a following throughout England, and their sheep-rearing business earned large profits.[13] After beginning construction of Wormleighton Manor the previous year with some 60 relatives, John Spencer bought Althorp in 1508 for £800 from the Catesby family.[8][14] At the time Spencer was also lord of the manors of Fenny Compton, Stoneton, Nobottle, Great Brington, Little Brington, Harlestone, Glassthorpe, Flore, Wicken, Wyke Hamon, Upper Boddington, Lower Boddington and Hinton, and owned numerous other properties.[15] The park took some four years to establish, with 300 acres of grassland, 100 acres of woodland and 40 acres of water.[8]

When John Spencer died in 1522, he passed the estate to his youngest son, Sir William Spencer, High Sheriff of Northamptonshire, who held it until his death in 1532. Only a boy at the time of William's death, his son John Spencer inherited Althorp and held it until his death in 1586, when he passed it to his son, also John, who died in 1600. John's son, Robert, was created the 1st Baron Spencer of Wormleighton on 21 July 1603. Anne of Denmark and Prince Henry came to Althorp on 25 June 1603 from Dingley Hall on their way to Windsor from Edinburgh.[16] She was welcomed by an entertainment scripted by Ben Jonson in which the Fairy Queen Mab gave her a jewel.[17][18] Lady Anne Clifford described the "infinite number of lords of ladies" who came to see the new queen on Sunday. On Monday, she moved on to Easton Neston.[19]

King Charles I is documented to have visited Althorp during his reign. The drawing room was built and the main hall enlarged for the occasion, with £1,300 spent on the banquet, an exorbitant sum for the period, equivalent to £280,400 in 2023.[f] Upon Robert Spencer's death in 1627 Althorp devolved to William Spencer, 2nd Baron Spencer of Wormleighton who held it until his death in 1636. William's eldest son, Henry Spencer, 1st Earl of Sunderland, known as The Lord Spencer between 1636 and June 1643, fought in the Battle of Edgehill in 1642 and was rewarded for his services on 8 June 1643 when the title of Earl of Sunderland was bestowed upon him, although the title cost him £3,000. He then fought in the siege of Gloucester in August 1643 and the First Battle of Newbury on 20 September 1643, where he was killed, aged 23, by a cannonball.[21]

Althorp in 1677 by Johannes Vorstermans

Following Henry's death, the estate passed to his eldest son Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland, just two years of age at the time. Cosimo III visited Althorp in 1669, documenting it in his Travels of Cosmo III. Grand Duke of Tuscany, through England, in 1669.[22][23] Robert built the current house in 1688 and made a series of changes to Althorp park.[24] However, Robert's bad temper and his reputation as a ruthless advocate of absolute monarchy made him numerous enemies, and he was forced to leave the country and flee to the Netherlands the same year.[25] He later underwent a political rehabilitation, becoming Lord Chamberlain of the Household in April 1697 and Lord Justice for a short period before retiring from public life in December of that year, after which he lived a secluded life at Althorp until his death in 1702. Robert passed Althorp to his son, Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland, who held it for twenty years. Described by John Evelyn as "a youth of extraordinary hopes,"[26] Charles inherited his father's passion for intrigue and repellent manners, and from his early years he had a great love of books, spending his leisure and his wealth in expanding the library at Althorp. Charles's second marriage to Anne Churchill, daughter of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough and Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough in 1700 was an important alliance for the Spencers and for his descendants; through it he was introduced to political life, and later the dukedom of Marlborough came to the Spencers. In 1722 he was implicated in what became known as the Atterbury Plot, to restore the House of Stuart, and his death was one of the factors which brought the Plot to light.[27] Althorp was then occupied by his son Robert Spencer, 4th Earl of Sunderland, who died childless in 1729. As a result, his brother, Charles, became 5th Earl of Sunderland, and subsequently 3rd Duke of Marlborough after the death of his aunt, Henrietta Godolphin (née Churchill), 2nd Duchess of Marlborough. Charles later led the naval descent on the French coastal port of St Malo during the Seven Years' War, after passing Althorp to the 3rd Earl's son, John Spencer, in January 1733. John Spencer, along with Charles and Thomas Coram, William Hogarth and others, was involved in the charter of the Foundling Hospital.[28] Upon his death in 1746, John passed his estates to his son John, only 12 years of age at the time, beneficiary to the greatest inheritance in the kingdom at the time with an income of almost £30,000 a year.[29]

Social and cultural hub

[edit]
John Spencer, 1st Earl Spencer and his daughter Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire were noted for their lavish spending and social connections

John served as Member of Parliament for Warwick from 1756 to 1761. He was renowned for his heavy spending on his political pursuits and campaigns, "indulging in the fiercely competitive and heinously expensive business of fighting elections to Parliament – which effectively meant bribing people to vote for his candidate rather than that of another magnate".[29] He spent £120,000 in one campaign alone and spent heavily on his estates, building Spencer House in London. He also wore expensive fashionable attire such as "diamond-buckled shoes". Althorp frequently hosted parties attended by the political and cultural elite, and it became known as a place of indulgence and festivities. At dinners and picnics in the gardens, John hired musicians to play French horns and organised unusual spectacles to entertain guests, such as a "Hooray Henry Olympics", as Charles Spencer calls it, with a donkey race for Lord Fordwick, dance competitions offering a guinea as the first prize, and sack races with the first prize of 30 shillings.[30] The Christmas of 1755 was a grand affair. John celebrated his 21st birthday with a ball at the house on 20 December during which he secretly married 18-year-old Margaret Georgiana Poyntz; the couple did not inform anyone for several days.[31] Around 5,000 guests were invited to a celebration party organised by the Spencers in a shed on the village green in the nearby village of Brington, consuming some 11,000 pints of beer. Althorp was "buzzing with activity", and France's top chefs were brought to Althorp to cater for the family and their guests during the week.[32] He was created Baron Spencer of Althorp and Viscount Spencer by George III on 3 April 1761, and on 1 November 1765, he was given the title Viscount Althorp and made the first Earl Spencer.[33] He was also High Steward of St Albans in 1772 and Mayor of St Albans in 1779.[29] John's daughter, Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire, was also known for her liberal spending, and although she became one of Britain's most prominent socialites in the late 18th century, with many political and literary connections,[34] she suffered from a gambling addiction and had an eating disorder.[35]

George John, 2nd Earl Spencer, by Sir Joshua Reynolds

John's son George John, 2nd Earl Spencer inherited Althorp after his father's death in 1783. He served as Whig MP for Northampton from 1780 to 1782 and for Surrey from 1782 to 1783 before accepting the title of 2nd Earl Spencer. He was later Home Secretary from 1806 to 1807 under Lord Grenville in the Ministry of All the Talents. Extremely interested in literary pursuits, he developed one of the largest private libraries in Europe at Althorp.[6] He was the instigator and first President of the Roxburghe Club (an exclusive bibliophilic club), founded in 1812, President of the Royal Institution from 1813 to 1827,[36] and Commissioner of the Public Records in 1831, among other literary pursuits.[37] In later life, his collecting habit had become an obsession, and he attempted to collect every volume ever published in Britain.[6] Such was his desire to obtain as complete a collection as possible, that when Napoleon instigated the secularisation of religious houses in south Germany, Spencer used the local British agent and Benedictine monk, Alexander Horn to acquire many of their rare books and manuscripts.[38] Althorp became a major cultural hub of England during his time; at one Christmas, the actor David Garrick, the historian Edward Gibbon, the playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan and the painter Joshua Reynolds, among other artistic figures attended a party there together.[39] However, George John's spending became problematic for the Spencers, especially as at the time they were feeling the impact of the agricultural depressions brought on by the Napoleonic Wars. By the time of his death in 1834 he had amassed a debt of £500,000, which he passed onto his son, John Spencer, 3rd Earl Spencer.[39]

The 3rd Earl became an active statesman, serving as Chancellor of the Exchequer under Lord Grey and Lord Melbourne from 1830 to 1834. Along with Lord John Russell, he led the fight to pass the Reform Bill of 1832, making more than twenty speeches, and is generally considered responsible for its victory.[40] Despite his debts, in respect for his father, John managed to retain the massive book collection, and also continue to run the other Spencer houses at Wimbledon and Spencer House in London, as well as his farm in Wiseton and shooting retreat in Norfolk. He achieved this mainly by far less extravagant living, spending much of the year at Wiseton where the running costs were £1,200 compared with the £5,000 needed to run Althorp and pay the staff of 40 in the house.[41] As a result, Althorp was largely abandoned during the late 1830s and early 1840s. John also leased out his lands and gardens and sold land in Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire, repaying all the debt by the time of his death in 1845, and beginning to run his properties at a profit. His son Frederick Spencer, 4th Earl Spencer, who owned Althorp from 1845 until his death in 1857, also retained the collection.[42]

John Spencer, 5th Earl Spencer, known as the Red Earl, inherited Althorp in 1857. He served as a Liberal Party politician and was a close friend of British prime minister William Gladstone, who he served under in all four of his cabinets.[43] Although politically successful, John fell into hard times financially and was forced to eventually sell much of the enormous library collection in 1892 to Enriqueta Rylands, who was building the University of Manchester Library.[44] After dying childless in 1910, John passed Althorp to his half brother, Charles Spencer, 6th Earl Spencer, who served as Lord Chamberlain from 1905 to 1912 in the Liberal administrations headed by Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman and H. H. Asquith.[citation needed]

Modern history

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Charles Spencer, 6th Earl Spencer, who owned Althorp from 1910 until his death in 1922. Portrait by Sir William Orpen.

Times became more difficult for the Spencers by the late 19th century, and many of their assets had to be sold off. Albert Spencer, 7th Earl Spencer inherited the estate after his father Charles' death in 1922. Albert became a well-known art connoisseur and was a trustee of the Wallace Collection, chairman of the Royal School of Needlework, a Fellow of both the Society of Antiquaries of London and the Royal Society of Arts, and from 1961 until 1969 he was Chair of the Advisory Council of the Victoria and Albert Museum.[45] Despite his keen interest in art, he began selling off paintings and other items to pay off debts. In the 1930s he was forced to sell off a small but immaculate Hans Holbein portrait of Henry VIII (now at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid) for £10,000 to finance his son's education. Although a large sum at the time, by 1998 it was reputed to be worth around £50 million.[46] Unlike many country houses in Britain during the Second World War which were occupied by the military and converted into hospitals, training camps and barracks, Althorp Palace remained untouched, thanks to Albert who saw to it that they used the stables instead. A Wellington bomber crashed near the ice house during the war, killing all of its crew.[47] Due to Spencer House being in a dangerous location in London during the Blitz, many of the pieces of furniture and items of the house were brought to Althorp for safekeeping, including numerous fireplaces and doors with curled "S" doorknobs, a signature of the Spencer family dating to the 18th century.[47]

The estate was first opened to the public in 1953 by Albert, to mitigate against taxation,[48] and Althorp had its own railway station called Althorp Park on the Northampton Loop Line until 1960.[49] After his death in 1975, Albert passed Althorp to his son Edward John, 8th Earl Spencer, who had served as Equerry to King George VI (1950–52) and to Queen Elizabeth II (1952–54).[50] Edward was a wine connoisseur and had an extensive wine cellar at Althorp. He made his own wine and attracted fellow connoisseurs from around the world to Althorp, although he did not sell much of it.[51] During Edward's ownership of Althorp approximately 20% of the furnishings of Althorp were sold off.[52] The divestment included eleven Van Dykes and nearly every religious painting in the collection, as well as estate housing, and drew severe public criticism, including from the heir.[53][54][55]

Edward left the estate to his son, the current owner Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, after his death in 1992. As a teenager, Charles served as a tour guide at the house and acquired a deep knowledge of Althorp.[56] At the time he inherited the estate it was losing some £400,000 annually, and the staff of 14 had to be significantly reduced.[57] Charles' older sister was Diana, Princess of Wales, who grew up with him at Althorp.[50]

Althorp House in July 2007

Since the 1990s Charles Spencer has done much to increase the revenue earned by the estate to keep it running. The annual Althorp Literary Festival was founded in 2003.[58][59] The heir apparent is Charles' son Louis Frederick John Spencer (born 1994). Charles has expressed concerns about the future of the estate and whether Louis might be forced to sell it.[60] In 2005 Charles endorsed a furniture collection of replicas from the house, known as the Althorp Living History Collection.[56]

In 2009 a major restoration of the roof, stonework and the mathematical tiles that clad the building was undertaken. Approximately £10 million was spent on repairing the roof alone. In 2010 an auction of over 700 items from Althorp's attics and cellars, as well as a Rubens and other notable works, achieved £21 million.[61][62]

Architecture and collections

[edit]
North (rear) elevation
South (front) elevation

Althorp house is described as standing in a low situation, "approached by a handsome avenue, beautifully shaded with trees".[4] The house was originally a "classically beautiful" red brick Tudor building, and a Johannes Vorstermans painting dated to 1677 shows a smaller red house at Althorp and Holdenby House in the distance to the far right.[63] Cosmo III noted that the interior of Althorp house was strongly influenced by Italian architecture, and remarked that it "may be said to be the best planned, and best arranged country seat in the kingdom; for though there may be many which surpass it in size, none are superior to it in symmetrical elegance".[23] The current building dates to 1688. Diarist John Evelyn described it that year: "The house, or rather palace, at Althorpe is a noble uniform pile in form of a half H, built of brick and freestone 'a la moderne'; the hall is well, the staircase excellent; the rooms of state, galleries, offices, and furniture, such as may become a great prince. It is situate in the midst of a garden, exquisitely planned and kept and all this in a park walled in with hewn stone, planted with rows and walks of trees, canals and fishponds and stored with game."[64] Its appearance was radically altered in the 18th century when the architect Henry Holland was commissioned to make extensive changes starting in 1788.[65] Mathematical tiles were added to the exterior, brought from Ipswich, encasing the old red brick, and four Corinthian pilasters, made from Roche Abbey stone in Yorkshire, were added to the front. The stone used to make the pilasters was reportedly intended by Christopher Wren to be used in the construction of St Paul's Cathedral.[66] Sash windows with glazing bars and "moulded stone heads and surrounds" were added.[67]

Interior

[edit]

The interior of the palace is generally considered its strongest asset as the Spencer family has assembled an impressive collection of portrait art, including several pieces painted by the Flemish master Anthony van Dyck including War and Peace, the favourite of the 9th Earl Spencer,[68] as well as countless valuable pieces of porcelain and furniture.[24] One of the rooms in the estate is called the Queen Mary bedroom, which was used by Queen Mary and George V during their visit to the estate in 1913.[69] Some £2 million was spent on redecorating the house in the 1980s by Raine, Countess Spencer.[70] This work has been reversed, and the interior returned to its original grand but understated appearance.

Ground floor

[edit]
Wootton Hall and saloon
[edit]
The staircase at Althorp House

Wootton Hall is the grand hall entrance on the central south side of Althorp house. "Perfectly proportioned" with a two-storey high ceiling, it was cited by Sir Nikolaus Pevsner as "the noblest Georgian room in the county".[71] It takes its name from the painter John Wootton who was commissioned by the family in 1733 to paint a number of massive paintings in his Marylebone studio to reflect the family's love of equestrian pursuits, particularly fox hunting. At the time, Wootton was considered to be the finest painter of horses in the country.[71] The paintings still hang on the walls. The hall has a substantial collection of artefacts collected over the years. Aside from the hall porter's chair, there is a dozen or so lavish-looking hall chairs, one of which is a sedan chair, rediscovered in the stable block in 1911, which had once been in Spencer House.[72]

A prominent feature of the Wootton Hall is its pair of Italian black and Beschia marble blackamoor torchères, originally given to the First Duke of Marlborough as a present from General Charles Churchill. In exceptionally good condition, they stand either side of the door into the saloon. These were discovered in the silt of the River Tiber and are depictions of slaves who once served in a Roman household.[72] Several flags stand above them, including the White Ensign. The ceiling is intricately made, featuring flowers in the plaster, each one different, the work of Colen Campbell in the early 18th century.[72] The black and white check marble floor is also a distinguishing feature of the room, but through most of its history this floor would have been left plain as horses and carriages would enter the hall inside.[73] In the mid-19th century Frederick, the 4th Earl, had laid down brown and blue tiles, replaced by the marble floor which was added by his son Robert in around 1910.[74] The floor gives significant depth to the hall and provides fine acoustics, so much that Diana would once practice her tap dancing in the hall as a teenager.[75]

Beyond the Wootton Hall is the saloon, which was converted from an inner courtyard and roofed in 1650 by Dorothy Spencer, Countess of Sunderland.[76] The saloon was the first room at Althorp to have electricity installed, and it contains an imposing oak staircase, added in the 1660s.[77][64] Cosmo III noted Althorp's "spacious staircase of the wood of the walnut tree,[g] stained, constructed with great magnificence; this staircase, dividing itself into two equal branches, leads to the grand saloon, from which is the passage into the chambers, all of them regularly disposed after the Italian manner, to which country the Earl was indented for a model of the design."[23] Historically, the staircase was painted white. It is described as being "surprisingly shallow and delightfully uneven – a physical manifestation of the long history of the house".[77]

Sitting and drawing rooms
[edit]
View of the side of Althorp House from the stables

The south drawing room is at the front of the house on the West Wing. In earlier times the room had served as a dining room, despite it being about as far from the kitchen as possible.[78] This section of the house was largely remodelled under Henry Holland,[67] but it retains its Georgian elegance today, "gilded to within an inch of its life", with walls painted in a duck egg blue colour with forest green drapery and peach-patterned sofas.[79] A large mirror with an exquisite gold frame stands between the two windows. The fireplace was added by the Chelsea stonemason Lancelot Edward Wood in 1802, and the ceiling by master builder Benjamin Broadbent of Leicester in 1865.[67] The ceiling in the yellow drawing room,[80] also known as the Rubens room because of its four Rubens paintings,[81] is also attributed to Broadbent.[82] There are numerous paintings on the walls, including fifteen Joshua Reynolds portraits and a miniature portrait in one of the alcoves of Admiral Lord Nelson, an associate of George John, Second Earl Spencer.[78] Although Higgerson, the night watchman, guarded the place from 8 pm to 8 am, in 1954 one of the lesser valuable paintings in the south drawing room was stolen in the night.[83]

The grandmother's sitting room is situated at the front of the eastern wing. It is noted for its deep blue hand-painted frescoes and formal furniture, and was the favourite room of Charles and Diana's grandmother, Cynthia Spencer, Countess Spencer.[84] Nearby was the Muniment room in which the Spencer family records were kept, described as a "musty apartment" which contained over 500 years of history, from medieval household accounts to letters from Jacobeans and accounts of Victorian house parties. The room was a favourite haunt of Spencer's grandfather, Albert Spencer, who would spend thousands of hours in it perusing over the family history. So guarded was he of the collection that when Winston Churchill once spent time in the room looking for information on his ancestor, John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722), Albert immediately doused out his cigar in fear of creating a fire.[85] The records were sold to the British Library in the 1980s, leaving the room empty, before it was converted to what is known as the "Steward's Room Flat".[86] This part of the house once had an extensive collection of 1830s bull paintings by Richard Ansdell.[87]

The Sutherland room lies at the rear east wing of the house and was once the bedroom of the Earl of Althorp in the first few centuries of the house when it was fashionable for the occupants to sleep on the ground floor and guests to sleep on the first floor. This was still the case during the Holland restoration, and as a result the room was ignored, so it retains many of the earlier mouldings not seen in many other parts of the house.[88] It contains two fireplaces made by John Vardy and James Stuart which were originally situated in Spencer House, and the room has the original 17th-century cornice. The paintings in the room were selected by the current owner Charles Spencer to honour John, Third Earl Spencer and his passion for foxhunting.[88] After it ceased usage as a bedroom, on special occasions the room would be full of life; on Christmas Day the room would be "transformed into a Christmas fairyland, with clockwork Santas, snowmen and angels all spinning and chiming in the candlelight". The children would have their places marked by a small cake with their names written on it in icing.[89]

The Marlborough room, which contains the great parlour, is named after Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough,[90] and is situated next to the Sunderland room and at left angles to the library.[91][92] The Marlborough room served as an "uncomfortable" drawing room until the 1990s when a Victorian rosewood dining table accommodating for up to 42 people was added, with 'squiggle-back' chairs attributed to George Seddon in 1800.[90] The new room was created after alterations were made to the large drawing room by the 6th Earl Spencer in 1911, including the removal of a dividing partition from the old billiard room.[93][94] Part of the restoration work attributed to the 7th Earl Spencer after 1957 includes a replacement of two Victorian chimney pieces in the Marlborough room with those from Spencer House, one which was crafted by Peter Scheemakers.[95] Portraits by Thomas Gainsborough, Joshua Reynolds, and George Romney, mostly of family members, adorn the walls, and accessions from the Spencer House are placed throughout.[93][96][97]

Examples of paintings at Althorp

Dining rooms
[edit]

The great dining room is situated in the east wing extension of the house and was added in 1877 under J. MacVicar Anderson during the time of the Red Earl. The room was inspired by the ballroom of Buckingham Palace, with walls hung with faded, red damask silk.[98] The Spencers ate their regular meals in the tapestry dining room, an inner room of the east side to the east of the Wooton Hall. Aside from the two fine vividly constructed tapestries, one of gypsies and one of farming, the room is fairly bleak in design compared to other rooms in the house; the dining table is relatively small, with a drab grey floor and open brick fireplace dated in large letters to 1683.[99] The "sombre" oak panelling originally came from the family's other property of Wormleighton Manor in Warwickshire.[100] Charles Spencer recalled that three generations of Spencers would eat their lunch together and that dining conditions were "silent, apart from the noises of my grandfather eating with great gusto, a napkin tucked in around his neck, hanging down over his popping-out tummy, and it was all very sad and tense".[101]

Library
[edit]
The Library in 1822

The ceiling of the original library at Althorp collapsed in 1773, and at the same time a new floor was put down in the Picture Gallery.[102] Ionic columns and an Adam style ceiling were added.[67] George John's fascination in literature began at a young age and there is a Reynolds portrait in the house of him at Trinity College, Cambridge holding a book By his later life, George John's collecting habit had become something of an obsession and he attempted to collect every volume ever published in Britain.[6]

Thomas Frognall Dibdin, who became chief librarian of Althorp

The books were kept in five apartments in Althorp in the west wing, which, combined, formed the "Long Library" with books from the floor to the ceiling along much of its approximately 200 by 20 feet (61.0 m × 6.1 m) length. He not only collected British works but imported Greek and Latin classics, and in 1790, he acquired the collection of Count Charles de Revicksky, paying an initial £1000, and then £500 annually until the count's death, only three years later.[103] George often paid great fees for rare books, including a woodcut of St Christopher dated to 1423, believed at that time to be the oldest work in ink with a date on it, the Papal Indulgence Letters of 1452, the Mazarin Bible of 1455, the Mentz Psalter of 1457, and some of the earliest works form the printing presses of Augsburg and Nuremberg such as Bonaventurae and Comestiorum Vitiorum.[6] In 1812, George John was involved in an intense bidding war with his cousin, The Duke of Marlborough, for a copy of Boccaccio's The Decameron of 1471, one of only three known copies. Marlborough won the auction with a bid of £2,260 – an amount described by Charles Spencer as "ludicrous" for that time – but he later sold it to George for £750.[39]

In 1802, George hired Reverend Thomas Frognall Dibdin as an official librarian to look after the collection and the library contains his many catalogues entitled Aedes Althorpianæ, documenting the books of the library. The collection became so enormous that the massive library became inadequate to hold the contents, and books began being stored along the long picture gallery on the first floor above it.[6] By the time of George John's death in 1834, he had amassed one of the largest private collections in Europe of some 110,000 volumes.[6] Alcoves were added to the ends of the library during the Holland restoration, creating extra room for the growing collection.[104]

Billiard room
[edit]

The billiard room is situated between the south drawing room and the library, and overlooks the deer park. Once known as the "Rubens room", the room was once described by Charles Spencer as a "dead space; desperately uncomfortable furniture, and Rubens's imposing portraits of several unattractive Habsburgs, against a tightly patterned silver silk, making it anything but welcoming".[105] The room has now been "brought to life" with numerous horse and sporting paintings and portraits, including a dramatic portrait of Elisabeth, Empress of Austria hunting, and a full-sized billiard table moved from the stables in the 1990s.[106][107] The chimney piece of the room was made by Derval under Holland,[67] and the room also contains an 1893 bronze sculpture of Forager, the Red Earl's favourite foxhound.[108] The Broadbent ceiling is dated to 1865.[80]

China museum and porcelain
[edit]

The old "painter's passage", parallel to the south drawing room, was renovated after the Second World War when glass cases were installed along its length to showcase the Spencer crockery, with a range of porcelain including Meissen, Sèvres, Kangxi, Chelsea and Derby pieces.[109] Charles Spencer remarked that his grandfather Albert was trying to say, "This part of Althorp will never be lived in again; so we may as well use it to show off the treasures in an orderly way".[110] Today, most of the collection has been moved to the China Museum which lies on the east side of the house, between the Sutherland room and the great dining room, and the passage now contains a series of busts and paintings in its place, including a self-portrait of Sofonisba Anguisciola, and portraits of the dramatist Molière and the actor David Garrick. Charles Spencer highlights a pair of late 17th-century blue and white tulipieres, special vases to hold tulips which were fashionable at the time, as his favourite in the museum.[111]

The Garden Lobby of Althorp also contains a number of pieces of porcelain from reputable European manufacturers, but also several rare Oriental pieces.[112] Of note in the Garden Lobby aside from its many plates is a Sèvres tobacco jar with double strap handles, believed to be painted by Louis Jean Thévenet in 1765,[113] two Chelsea vases decorated with putti which metaphorically represent the four seasons, which the Red Earl had bought as a gift for his wife Charlotte,[114] an extremely finely carved Meissen flower bowl with hundreds of tiny gilded blooms which dates to around 1745,[115] a Meissen card box, and a blue and gold cherubic Meissen chocolate set-for-one which was believed to have been made for Marie Antoinette in 1781 as a present celebrating the birth of her son Dauphin.[116]

First floor

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[edit]

The picture gallery stretches for 115 feet (35 m) on the first floor of the west wing, 21 feet (6.4 m) wide and 19 feet (5.8 m) high.[h][118] The room is one of the best remaining examples of the original Tudor woodwork and ambiance in the mansion, featuring oak panelling along its length. During the renovation of the 18th century, the oak panelling in the gallery was covered with white paint, and it was not until 1904 that it was restored to its former glory, the restoration funded by the sale of a Rubens painting in the housekeeper's room.[119] Due to its length, during Tudor times the ladies of the mansion used the gallery for exercise on rainy days to avoid dragging their long skirts and dresses through the mud in the grounds.[120] It was also used as a dining hall, and in 1695 the county nobility and gentry all met together and dined in the gallery to pay their respects to William III.[121]

The gallery has an extensive collection of about 60 portraits, including Van Dyck's War and Peace, a John de Critz portrait of James I,[122] a Frans Pourbus the Younger aristocratic portrait of Claude Lorraine, Duc de Chevreuse,[123] a Mary Beale portrait of Charles II and others of him by court artist Sir Peter Lely,[i] and portraits of George Digby, Second Earl of Bristol and William, First Duke of Bedford. Visiting the gallery in 1748, the Marchioness Grey described the gallery in a letter to a friend: "Indeed there is a gracefulness and life in the figures beyond what I ever saw, they are quite animated and a strength of colouring that strikes you from one end of that gallery to the other. It is so beautiful that a picture which hangs by it is hurt by its situation." Horace Walpole once wrote: "Althorp has several very fine pictures by the best Italian hands, and a gallery of all one's acquaintances by Vandyke and Lely. In the gallery I found myself quite at home; and surprised the housekeeper by my familiarity with the portraits."[118] The portraits in the Picture Gallery are set in extravagant baroque gilded frames, designed by Robert Spencer, the Second Earl, which feature as "cartouche at the top and a stylised mask at the bottom, with a moulded inner edge, which softens the line between frame and painting".[125] Albert Spencer was so protective of War and Peace, once the most valuable item in Althorp, that he had the nearest tall window in the gallery converted into a door with hinges, so in case of a fire it could safely be lifted outside.[126] There is also a small hidden door between War and Peace and "The Windsor Beauties" cut into the oak which leads to a staircase and the Pink Suite, a guest bedroom. Lady Margaret Douglas-Home, sister of Albert Spencer, lived at Althorp from 1910, and the gallery was a favourite of hers. During the renovation of the 1980s, the old-fashioned celestial and terrestrial globes dating to the George II period were moved from the gallery back to the library.[127]

The chapel on the upper floor became a store room in the early 1980s for pieces being sold off.[127] The stained glass window of the chapel, with the Spencer crest, dates to 1588, and was brought to Althorp from Wormleigton. The organ on the other hand is far more recent, acquired from the parish of Meriden in the 1990s.[128] A number of earlier occupants of Althorp, particularly George John and Frederick, were devout Christians and would preach in the chapel, and Robert, 6th Earl Spencer would hold a daily service here. It is still used for family christenings, and for services at Christmas, Easter and Harvest Thanksgiving.[129]

Notable paintings on the upper floor

Bedrooms
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The oak bedroom is at the rear of the castle, on the western side between King William bedroom and the great room. The marriage of the first Earl Spencer and Margaret Georgiana took place in secret here on 20 December 1755, during a ball which was taking place at Althorp to celebrate John's 21st birthday.[130][31] Georgiana later recalled, "We both behaved very well, spoke distinctly and loudly but I trembled so much I could hardly stand".[31] As of 1998 it was furnished with deep red wall paper, rug and chairs, with oak floors, bed and chairs. There are several portraits on the wall, one of them very large above the fireplace. The Spencer "S" features on the blue velvet bed cover, and above the king-sized bed and by the fireplace.[130]

The room to the east of the oak bedroom is known as the great room. The room was established in the mid-17th century as part of a reception suite, and was used by George John, the Second Earl for important political conferences during his period as First Lord of the Admiralty and Home Secretary.[131] The great room, predominantly red and gold in design like many of the first floor rooms, contains a table and chairs with a large gilded mirror with three urns in front of it. The long mirror, designed by James Stuart, who was noted for his Athenian designs, features a tableaux at the top with the Spencer coat of arms and the pulling of chariots by cherubs, representing the love between John and Georgiana.[132] The great room contains an extensive collection of miniature portraits, including a very rare Lucas de Heere portrait of Lady Jane Grey as a teenage girl at her family residence in Bradgate, Leicestershire.[133] The Portrait of Isaak Abrahamsz. Massa is mentioned in the 1822 Bibliotheca Spenceriana as hanging in one of the bedrooms at Althorp.[134] It was sold in 1924 to art merchant Joseph Duveen, who sold it the following year to Canadian businessman Frank P. Wood.[135]

The Princess of Wales Bedroom is named after the wife of the future King Edward VII, Alexandra, Princess of Wales, who stayed at Althorp in 1863 on a visit to see the Red Earl. Although the fabric of the four-poster bed was designed in 1911, the room is largely Georgian, with deep red walls and furnishings, and contains a notable portrait of a young princess by the Spanish court painter, Bartolomé Esteban Murillo.[136] The Queen Mary Bedroom is named after Mary, the wife of King George V, who visited Althorp in 1913. It contains a bed with an extremely tall structure, dated to the 18th century, draped in pea green taffet. Of particular note in the Queen Mary Bedroom are two chairs covered with needlework created by Albert, who was once the chairman of the Royal School of Needlework.[137]

The upper floor also contains the India silk bedroom and the ante room, which measures 23 ft 4 inches by 32 ft 6 inches.[117] Formerly known as the patchwork bedroom, the ante room was established by Charlotte, Countess Spencer and her sister during the Victorian period, and today forms part of a suite of state chambers.[56]

Outer buildings

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Althorp Park gateway

In total, Althorp estate contains 28 listed buildings and structures, of which nine are planting stones, dotted around the park. Two are Grade I listed, including the main house; two are Grade II* listed, including the stable block and Gardener's House, Althorp, and the remainder have a Grade II designation, mainly garden screens, gates and gateways aside from the planting stones.[138]

The mustard-yellow Grade II* listed stable block, designed by architect Roger Morris with a Palladian influence, was ordered by Charles, Fifth Earl of Sutherland in the early 1730s.[139] It replaced an earlier building which had long been in disrepair and could hold 30 to 40 horses. Morris designed the building with a clear Tuscan architectural design, drawing upon earlier inspiration from his stables at Inigo Jones's St Paul's Church in Covent Garden.[140] A fountain was installed in the courtyard to provide the horse's troughs with water, although this no longer survives. Several rooms were built within the stable block, including hot and cold baths for riders after hunting, a veterinarian's room with medicines for horses, and what was once a smoking room.[141] Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough remarked at how large the structure was when it was constructed, noting that it was rather an extravagance.[142] It was converted into an exhibition centre to celebrate the life of Princess Diana between 1998 and 2013, and the space now houses a yearly exhibition picking on a theme of the estate. 2019's was entitled 'Animals of Althorp' and explored the estate's relationship with animals throughout the centuries. .[143]

The stable block

The Grade I listed Falconry was built in 1613 using the same local ironstone as the stables and is of similar Palladian appearance, featuring a "gabled roof with ashlar parapets, kneelers and obelisks".[144] It is a two-storey structure, but a single storey red-brick extension was added in the 19th century. The hall of the falconry contains 2 arcaded openings with keystones, and to the left of the hall is a fireplace with Delft tiles, dated to the 19th century.[144] Over the centuries at various times it has been the home of the park warden, the gamekeeper, and the kennelman who looked after the hounds, hosting puppy shows in the 20th century.[145] Both the stable block and Falconry became listed buildings in November 1954.[144][146] Nearby was the Lavender Cottage with a thatched roof and a wendy house which the Althorp children would play in, but was accidentally burned down by the son of the chauffeur of Albert, and never rebuilt.[140]

The Fifth Earl also built the Grade II* listed Gardener's House at the back of the park, in a similar Palladian style. The head gardener of Althorp resided at the villa in the 18th century. Princess Diana had been intent on living in the castle following her separation from Prince Charles, but due to security concerns it was considered unfeasible.[147] Of particular note is its Victorian three-quarter life-sized marble sculpture, The Shipwrecked Mariner, depicting a sailor reaching desperately from a raft. Charles Spencer has since moved it from the main portico of Gardener's House to the main house where it sits in the Painters Passage.[148]

Both of the North and South West Lodges of Althorp date to around 1730 under Roger Morris and are both built from lias ashlar with slate roofs. The North and South East Lodges date to around 1810 and are built from limestone ashlar with slate roofs. All four buildings became Grade II listed buildings in November 1954.[149][150][151][152] The Grade II listed Dairy Cottage, to the northwest of the lake, dates to the late 18th century under Henry Holland, and was listed in December 1986. It is a two-storey building with an attic and hipped roof. It has a 19th-century central door and a surrounding porch "flanked by casements under flat arch heads".[153]

Grounds

[edit]
Aerial view of Althorp and Diana, Princess of Wales's Island on Round Oval lake

The estate of Althorp covers an area of at least 13,000 acres (50 km2), and not only includes the house grounds but areas of woodland, cottages, farms, and surrounding hamlets.[1] The soil in the area is of a rich, dark-coloured loam,[4] and the estate is situated mainly on Jurassic Clay between 85 metres (279 ft) and 125 metres (410 ft) above sea level, with the highest area lying in the southeast of Althorp on Northampton Sand.[154] Within the grounds, there are earthworks of the lost village of Althorp on which the estate was built. To the southwest of the house is High Wood, with the Dog Pond to the east of this. Bircham Spinney is immediately to east, to the south of the pond. Hopyard Spinney lies in the north-east corner of the estate bordering the A428, and Sir John's Wood marks the northwest corner.[3] Sir John's Wood is named after John Spencer who was responsible for the planting of a number of woods on the grounds in the latter half of the 16th century. One tablet mentions he planted one of the woods in 1567–1568 and Sir John's Wood in 1589, at a time when lords of manors around Britain grew increasingly anxious of their security following the Spanish Armada and planted woodlands around their properties.[155] Between 1567 and 1901 at least seven stone date tablets were erected in the park commemorating the planting of trees.[156] In the north and north-eastern part of Althorp is marshy ground which is natural feeding ground for herons, a prized delicacy historically at the house. They were harvested by the gamekeeper usually from early March, after being fattened up by meal and bullock's liver. In 1842 one hundred nests were recorded at the estate but this had fallen to ten by 1889. The herons were moved to a pond about two miles away in 1993 and are no longer produced for domestic consumption at Althorp.[157] Northampton Golf Club, established in July 1893,[158] is situated immediately to the southeast of Althorp.[3]

Robert Spencer hired the French landscape architect André Le Nôtre to lay out the park and grounds in the 1660s.[12] A map by Jan Kip which appeared in Britannia Illustrata (1709) showed the result of the changes, depicting the house with a wide rectangular courtyard on the main south front, a formal walled garden structured by rectangular-shaped flower-beds and lawns to the east, and tree-lined avenues to the north and south.[12] During the renovation under Holland in the 18th century, the lake was drained in the deer park, which the First Earl had used as a playground with full-sized Venetian gondolas, and remaining traces of the old moat were eradicated. From 1860 onwards the architect William Milford Teulon (1823–1900) updated the gardens at Althorp, and further additions and changes were made in the 1990s under Dan Pearson when the Diana memorial was established and many trees planted.[159] After Teulon's additions, the Spencers began growing its own fruit and vegetables and flowers.[160] In 1901 a variety of sweet pea, now known "Spencer type", with "flowers of exceptional size and of an exquisite shade of pink", was cultivated at Althorp by Silas Cole, the chief gardener to the Fifth Earl Spencer, and exhibited at horticultural shows.[159]

Diana grave, memorial, and exhibition

[edit]
Round Oval lake with the Diana memorial beyond
Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial

Diana, Princess of Wales, was interred on a small island in the middle of the ornamental Round Oval lake,[2][161] which was created by Teulon in 1868.[162] The island was decided as the best place to lay her to rest because the water would, according to Spencer, "act as a buffer against the interventions of the insane and ghoulish, the thick mud presenting a further line of defence. We all agreed that, with its beauty and tranquillity, this was the place for Diana to be".[163] The ground was consecrated by the Bishop of Peterborough prior to the burial.[164] Her burial place is marked with a white memorial plinth and urn.[165]

A Doric-style temple with Diana's name inscribed on top is situated across from the lake, as a place where visitors can lay down their floral tributes to the princess. It contains a black silhouette of her in the middle, set in white marble, evocative of the Henry Holland's material preference, with a tablet on either side. One tablet displays a quote from Diana about her love of charitable work, and the other holds Charles Spencer's concluding tribute given at her funeral in Westminster Abbey.[165] The temple was originally commissioned by George Spencer, 2nd Earl Spencer, to thank God for the British victory in the Battle of the Nile.[166]

Following the death of Diana on 31 August 1997 and the subsequent decision to create a memorial and open the house and estate to the public, the garden designer Dan Pearson was commissioned to update the park and gardens, to accommodate for visitors. A series of 36 oak trees was planted along the access road, symbolic of the years of Diana's life.[167] Thousands of plants were planted, including 100 white rambling roses on the island and 1000 white water lilies, donated by Stowe School, in the water around it.[168]

The estate stable block was converted into a public exhibition devoted to the memory of Diana, and open between 1998 and 2013, It was designed by Rasshied Ali Din, who had to seek approval from English Heritage due to it being a Grade II listed building. Din said of the result, "You have a contrast of the modern and the new with the old and the established, which is basically a metaphor for Diana. She was a very modern woman within an established environment."[169] He created six rooms out of the former carriage houses and stabling areas, and the old tea room was transformed into a restaurant, and toilets installed for visitors.[170]

The first room was called "Spencer Women", placing Diana in context to the women of her family, with paintings and jewellery of Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, and portraits of Georgiana Spencer etc. The next room contained four minutes of edited video footage of Diana as a child to show to the world that she did not simply come into being in 1980 when she became the girlfriend of Prince Charles. It featured footage of Diana at her christening, her first winter, her first birthday, her first steps, and footage displaying her affection for animals, swimming, and leaving for boarding school.[171] The room also contained her tuck-box, toy typewriter, ballet shoes, and a childhood photo album.[143]

A third room documented the Royal Wedding and its "glamour and excitement", with a display of the David Emanuel wedding dress she wore on 29 July 1981.[143] A fourth room documented her extensive charitable and humanitarian work through video footage edited by Tim Ashton, and a fifth, known as the "Tribute Room".

The sixth room was the Exhibition, which was a celebration of her life, and contained large glass cases at the sides with dummies of Diana wearing her notable suits and dresses, with the occasions documented on cards on the floor in front of them. A great glass case at the end underneath a stylish black and white photograph contained a selected few hundred of the thousands of condolence books the Spencers received from around the world, designed to give a "final sense of scale to the impact of Diana's life and of her death".[172] A sleek, silk-bound copy of the address that her brother Charles delivered at Diana's funeral was available for £25.[143]

The estate and house are open to the public during the summer months (1 July to 30 August), although the exhibition centre in the stable block was closed in August 2013. It was believed to be due to concern about the commercial exploitation of Diana's name, and the desire to "squash the cult of Diana".[143] The items on display have been packed up, with the intention to give them to her sons William and Harry.[143] All profits made were donated to the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund, which closed in 2012.[48]

Haunting

[edit]

Although the current owner, Charles Spencer, professes to have never witnessed a ghost at Althorp or anywhere else, over the years numerous ghostly sightings have been reported in the mansion. In the mid-19th century the Dean of Lincoln was invited to stay at the property by Frederick, 4th Earl Spencer. He complained the following morning that during the night a figure dressed as a groom (believed to be the ghost of the deceased servant of the 3rd Earl) had entered his room holding candles and checking that they were snuffed out around the bed.[173] Lady Margaret Douglas-Home professed to being aware of a ghost of a girl with grey slippers in the gallery.[174]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Althorp is a Grade I listed stately home and estate encompassing approximately 13,000 acres (5,300 hectares) in the of Althorp, , .
It has been the ancestral seat of the since 1508, when Sir John Spencer, a prosperous sheep grazier from , purchased the manor and constructed the original house on the site.
The estate features extensive parkland, formal gardens, and a significant private collection of , furniture, ceramics, and books accumulated by successive generations of the Spencer earls.
Althorp achieved global recognition as the childhood home of Diana, Princess of Wales, after her family relocated there in 1975 upon her father succeeding as 8th Earl Spencer.
Following Diana's death in 1997, she was interred on a secluded island in the estate's Oval Lake, a location chosen for its privacy and symbolism, which has since drawn numerous visitors.
Currently owned by Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, the property remains a private residence while portions are opened seasonally to the public, highlighting its architectural evolution from Tudor origins through 18th-century neoclassical expansions.

Etymology

Origins and Linguistic Evolution

The name Althorp traces its origins to the of 1086, where the settlement is recorded as Olletorp in the hundred of Nobottle, , encompassing 10 households, 4 villagers, 4 smallholders, and 2 slaves under the tenure of Gunfrid de Tani. This entry documents a modest rural amid the post-Conquest survey of English manors, with taxable value assessed at 5 pounds in 1066 declining to 40 shillings by 1086, reflecting economic shifts in the Mercian landscape. Etymologically, Olletorp combines the personal name Olla—an Anglo-Scandinavian attested in early medieval records—with þorp, from denoting a secondary farmstead or outlying settlement, a term disseminated via Danish Viking settlements in the region including . The prefix Olla- likely refers to a local landowner or founder, while the suffix underscores the site's role as a dependent rather than a primary village, consistent with Norse-influenced in eastern where over 1,500 -thorpe endings survive. Subsequent medieval spellings, such as Holtropp and Aldrop appearing in charters and surveys up to the , exhibit phonetic variations typical of scribal practices, including metathesis and vowel shifts, but retain the core structure without substantive semantic alteration. By the , the form Althorp had standardized in legal and estate documents, stabilizing amid Tudor-era administrative reforms and reflecting fixed parish boundaries that persisted through enclosures and later developments. This linguistic continuity post-1500 underscores the estate's enduring identity as a defined territorial unit, with no major orthographic evolution thereafter despite shifts in pronunciation among aristocratic proprietors.

History

Pre-Spencer Ownership and Early Development

Althorp is recorded in the of 1086 as Olletorp, a modest settlement in the hundred of Nobottle, , with approximately 10 households supporting an estimated population of 50 individuals engaged primarily in arable . The manor was divided between two tenants-in-chief: Count Robert of Mortain held the larger portion, valued at 1 pound in 1086 (down from 5 shillings in 1066), featuring 2 ploughlands (1 lord's and 1 men's team), 3 smallholders, 3 slaves, 1 , 8 acres of meadow, and 2 acres of woodland; controlled the smaller share with 3 freemen, 1 ploughland (men's team), and comparable basic agrarian resources. Through the medieval period, Althorp functioned as a typical manor under successive lords, evolving from Domesday-era holdings into a village centered on with timber-framed structures for tenants and basic manorial operations. By , tax records indicate 51 adult taxpayers, reflecting modest growth in and viability tied to arable and activities amid broader feudal tenancies. Ownership passed through various noble families before reaching the Catesbys in the late , who held the approximately 300-acre manor focused on agricultural output. Depopulation accelerated in the early due to for sheep —a common driver of deserted medieval villages in the region—leaving no tenants by 1505 and prompting the estate's sale.

Spencer Family Acquisition and 17th-18th Century Transformations

In 1508, Sir John Spencer, a prosperous sheep grazier from , acquired the Althorp estate, comprising a moated and approximately 300 acres of farmland, from the Catesby family for £800. Having previously rented the land and recognized its potential, Spencer invested his wool trade profits to construct a new stone house by around 1511, marking the Spencers' transition from merchants to significant landowners and initiating their long association with the property. This acquisition reflected the family's rising ambitions, leveraging mercantile success to establish a rural seat that would underpin their ascent into the through subsequent strategic marriages and political engagements. By the late 17th century, Althorp had evolved into a symbol of Spencer prestige under Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland (1641–1702), a key Stuart courtier and . In 1688, Sunderland oversaw the demolition of the Tudor-era structure—previously visited by Charles I—and its replacement with the current mansion, designed to accommodate grand entertaining and reflect the family's elevated status amid Restoration politics. The rebuild, executed in brick with formal state rooms, was funded by Sunderland's offices and inherited wealth, enhancing Althorp's role as a venue for political alliances and social display during a period of dynastic uncertainty following the . Further transformations occurred in the late when George John Spencer, 2nd Earl Spencer (1758–1834), commissioned architect Henry Holland in 1787 to modernize the house extensively. Holland's alterations included cladding the exterior in white stucco for a neoclassical appearance, reconfiguring interiors with updated state apartments, and filling in the surrounding to create unified parkland, all completed by 1789. These changes, financed through the family's accumulated estates, political influence—including the 1st Earl's roles under Pitt the Younger—and commercial interests, positioned Althorp as a refined aristocratic retreat amid the Enlightenment's emphasis on rational and architectural symmetry.

19th Century as Aristocratic Seat

In the 19th century, Althorp consolidated its role as a premier aristocratic seat under successive Spencer earls, exemplifying the self-reliant management of large estates during Britain's era of landed elite dominance. John Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl Spencer (1782–1845), who served as Viscount Althorp and led Whig parliamentary reforms including the 1832 Reform Act, utilized the estate for political networking and rural governance. His administration emphasized agricultural efficiency, with tenant farms generating substantial revenues—two principal farms alone yielding about £4,000 each in annual gross receipts during the 1820s—to fund upkeep and improvements without external subsidies. Fox hunting epitomized Althorp's traditional elite functions, with the Pytchley Hunt—a pack established in 1757—regularly convening there for meets in the expansive parklands, shaped by Lancelot "Capability" Brown's 1768 landscaping and maintained for sporting pursuits. The 3rd Earl's personal devotion to the sport influenced estate operations, prioritizing horse facilities and terrain suited to hounds and riders. John Poyntz Spencer, 5th Earl (1835–1910), styled the "Red Earl," perpetuated these customs as a Liberal politician and avid huntsman, commissioning a life-size bronze statue to honor the family's equestrian heritage. Expansions to stable blocks accommodated growing packs of hunters, reinforcing Althorp's viability through diversified estate income from rents and covert sales amid fluctuating agricultural markets. This period marked peak aristocratic autonomy, with Althorp's 13,000 acres sustaining familial prestige via prudent tenancy and conservative Whig affiliations, unburdened by state intervention.

20th Century Events and Diana's Childhood

Under the custodianship of Albert Spencer, 7th Earl Spencer, from 1922 to 1975, Althorp experienced continuity as a private family estate despite the disruptions of the World Wars. During World War II, the house avoided direct requisition as a military base, with only the stables repurposed for wartime use, while family treasures were secured by relocation to safer locations, including transfers from Spencer House in London to Althorp itself for preservation. This oversight ensured minimal structural or collection damage, reflecting the Earl's emphasis on local governance as a Conservative councillor in Northamptonshire and his role in sustaining the property's aristocratic function without significant alteration. Diana Frances Spencer, born on 1 July 1961 at Park House on the Sandringham Estate, spent her early childhood there before the family relocated to in 1975 following the 7th 's death and her father's succession as 8th Spencer. She resided at through her teenage years until around 1976, engaging in typical activities of an upper-class upbringing, including local schooling and time in the grounds, amid the family's post-divorce dynamics after 1969 when her father gained primary custody. This period represented a routine extension of Spencer lineage occupancy rather than a transformative event for the estate, with no documented shifts in operational maintenance tied to her presence; surviving family correspondence, such as later letters referencing childhood routines, underscores standard domestic life without operational impact. The estate's day-to-day administration persisted unchanged after Diana's 1981 marriage to , prioritizing agricultural, archival, and familial continuity over any personal associations.

Post-1997 Modern Management under Charles Spencer

Following the death of , on August 31, 1997, , arranged for her burial on an island in the Oval Lake at Althorp to provide a private resting place inaccessible to the public, ensuring that only family members could visit and shielding her sons from media intrusion—a privacy denied to her in life, as articulated in family statements emphasizing a secure site for reflection. The decision aligned with Spencer's broader approach to estate stewardship, prioritizing seclusion for familial graves amid heightened . Under Spencer's oversight since inheriting in 1992, Althorp has been partially opened to visitors during summer months ( and ) to generate revenue for maintenance of its 13,000-acre grounds and collections, reflecting pragmatic fiscal strategies to sustain the property without full commercialization. Renovations have continued, including a multi-year project initiated around 2023 involving Spencer's then-wife, , focusing on garden restorations such as the walled garden to preserve historical features while adapting to modern needs. Conservation efforts have emphasized through organic and wildflower planting, resulting in observed increases in such as deer and birds, which supports ecological health and reduces long-term maintenance costs compared to . In May 2025, a derelict farmhouse on the estate, Dallington Grange approximately five miles from the main house, was destroyed by fire in an incident treated as by , prompting Spencer to thank firefighters publicly while relying on private security enhancements amid ongoing investigations.

Architecture

Exterior Design and Structural History

Althorp House originated as a red-brick Tudor manor constructed in the , reflecting the prevalent during the Spencer family's early tenure on the estate. The structure featured characteristic Tudor elements such as steep gables and tall chimneys, though specific details of the initial build are limited due to subsequent modifications. By the late , the house underwent a significant rebuild around , establishing the core form that would underpin later alterations while preserving elements of its Tudor origins beneath newer layers. In the late , under the direction of the 2nd Earl Spencer, architect Henry Holland led a comprehensive remodelling from 1787 to 1790, transforming the exterior to align with neoclassical tastes. This included encasing the original red-brick facade in mathematical tiles—thin, glazed ceramic pieces designed to imitate cut stone—and adding four Corinthian pilasters to the south front for enhanced symmetry and grandeur. Holland's interventions also involved updating the roofline and integrating Weldon stone elements, creating a more unified and restrained Palladian appearance that masked the building's earlier features. Subsequent structural changes were minimal until the , when maintenance addressed weathering on the tiled and stone surfaces. In 2010, a £10 million restoration project marked the most extensive exterior works since Holland's era, encompassing re-roofing with slate replacements, stonework repairs, and comprehensive to stabilize the facade against ongoing . This effort, involving approximately 40,000 hours of specialized labor, focused on preserving the neoclassical envelope while ensuring long-term structural integrity without altering the historical silhouette.

Interior Layout and Key Rooms

The interior layout of Althorp House spans approximately 100,000 square feet across multiple floors, with principal reception rooms on the and sleeping quarters primarily on the first and upper levels. The features key spaces like the Saloon, a central gathering area overlooked by a gallery from the first-floor bedrooms, facilitating both formal entertaining and family circulation. Adjacent is the , expanded in 1788 by architect Henry Holland, characterized by ornate 18th-century plaster ceilings and used historically and contemporarily as a family sitting room. The first floor houses the six state bedrooms, reserved for distinguished guests, each with distinct historical styling, alongside a 115-foot oak-paneled Picture Gallery and a in the east range. Additional bedrooms, totaling around 31 across the house, occupy the first and second floors, with attic spaces providing further accommodation. A grand central staircase connects levels, emphasizing vertical flow in the layout. Usage has evolved from 17th- and 18th-century conventions where members often occupied ground-floor rooms for convenience, to modern adaptations prioritizing , with state rooms dedicated to guests and quarters on upper floors for seclusion. Wood paneling and , much dating to the 18th-century renovations, maintain continuity in these spaces, supporting both residential and occasional public functions under stewardship.

Associated Outbuildings

The stables at Althorp, built in the early 1700s from local , were designed to house 100 horses and 40 grooms, supporting the estate's equestrian operations. This mustard-yellow Grade II* listed structure, influenced by , served utilitarian purposes including stabling during when the main house avoided requisition. In modern times, portions have been repurposed for visitor facilities such as a and , while hosting exhibitions on estate history until the early 2010s. Farmhouses and cottages form integral outbuildings across the 13,000-acre estate, aiding agricultural functions and tenant housing. A derelict at Dallington Grange suffered extensive damage from a fire on May 27, 2025, which authorities and the treated as deliberate by vandals, underscoring vulnerabilities in maintaining remote structures. Landscape features like the memorial temple, repainted in June 2025 under Spencer's oversight, link architectural elements to the grounds, providing focal points for estate aesthetics and commemoration. Bridges within the parkland facilitate access across water features, integrating outbuildings with broader terrain management. Ongoing logs reflect proactive preservation, as evidenced by recent structural restorations to combat and ensure functional longevity.

Collections

Fine Art and Portraits

The fine art and portraits at Althorp form a core component of the Spencer family's collections, primarily serving as visual chronicles of the lineage from the onward, with many works acquired through strategic marriages, political alliances, and commissions funded by the family's rising fortunes in and Whig politics. Housed in the 115-foot Picture Gallery on the first floor, the assortment emphasizes English portraiture by masters including , Sir , and , alongside historical subjects that reflect aristocratic ties. A standout piece is van Dyck's (1637), a full-length double allegorically depicting George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol ("War"), and William Russell, later 1st Duke of Bedford ("Peace"), which entered the Spencer holdings during the amid the family's accumulation and remains a centerpiece despite 20th-century tax-driven dispersals of other van Dycks in 1975. Other 17th-century acquisitions include Frans Pourbus the Younger's of Claude de , Prince de Chévreuse (1610), linking to continental via marital networks. Eighteenth-century commissions by (1734–1783), prominently feature Reynolds's works, such as the portrait of Lavinia Bingham, Countess Spencer (1781–1782), celebrating her marriage into the family, and depictions of heirs like John Charles Spencer, Viscount Althorp (c. 1786), underscoring dynastic continuity. Gainsborough's portrait of Lady Georgiana Cavendish further illustrates inter-family connections through portraiture. These pieces, restored periodically to preserve their evidentiary value for , highlight the Spencers' self-presentation as enduring rather than mere decorative excess. Earlier portraits, potentially including attributions like Lucas de Heere's depiction of (before 1584), extend the record to Tudor-era associations, though provenance details remain tied to post-acquisition validations rather than direct commissions. The collection's integrity post-1975 sales and subsequent upkeep reflects deliberate curation to retain lineage-focused items over speculative investments.

Furniture and Decorative Arts

Althorp's furniture collection features 18th-century English pieces commissioned by the to equip the estate amid its expansions under the 1st and 2nd Earls Spencer. These include cabinetry and seating in and , reflecting neoclassical influences adapted for domestic use in state rooms and libraries. Prominent examples encompass Thomas Chippendale-designed library bookcases, originally crafted for the Long Library to house family archives alongside decorative shelving; such pieces underscore the Spencers' patronage of leading cabinetmakers during the mid-1700s Gothic and revivals. Provenance traces to direct family orders, with bills and ledgers preserved in estate records confirming authenticity and original placements. Decorative arts highlight silverware amassed through inheritance and acquisition, notably the Marlborough Silver—a comprehensive service of Georgian-era and retained at Althorp despite 20th-century dispersals. These items, often hallmarked from makers like Paul Storr, furnish dining and drawing rooms, serving both utilitarian and display functions in period settings. Conservation efforts since the 1990s, overseen by Charles Spencer, have involved specialist repairs to , , and , addressing wear from centuries of use and preventing further deterioration amid public access. This upkeep, funded partly through licensed reproductions, preserves utility while enhancing visitor immersion in authentic interiors, thereby supporting Althorp's annual income exceeding £1 million from guided tours.

Manuscripts and Family Archives

The Spencer family archives at Althorp house an extensive collection of manuscripts spanning the 16th to 20th centuries, serving as primary sources for verifying the estate's acquisition, management, and familial activities. Key documents include the original deeds recording John Spencer's purchase of the Althorp estate in 1508, which marked the family's entry into major landownership through revenues from sheep farming. These early records substantiate the causal role of agricultural wealth in enabling subsequent expansions and elevations to nobility. The archives encompass diverse materials such as medieval household accounts, Jacobean-era letters from political figures, and personal journals, including that of George Trimmer Savile, Marquis of Halifax, offering granular evidence of daily operations, social networks, and estate finances. Financial documents reveal patterns of revenue from land leases, investments, and periodic debts, highlighting causal pressures like agricultural fluctuations and taxes that influenced the family's strategic decisions over centuries. Portions of these papers, covering the 15th to early 20th centuries, are deposited at the , facilitating limited scholarly verification while preserving originals at Althorp for authenticity. Access to the core family-held manuscripts remains restricted to protect and prevent misinterpretation, with no comprehensive reported, though select documents support historical publications by members. Later 20th-century items include sparse personal notes from the Spencer children's childhoods, providing incidental corroboration of domestic life but subordinated to the archives' emphasis on institutional continuity. This textual corpus underscores the archives' value in countering anecdotal histories through direct evidentiary chains.

Grounds and Landscape

Estate Layout and Historical Landscaping

The Althorp estate, encompassing approximately 250 hectares of land, features a layout shaped by successive modifications prioritizing both aesthetic vistas and practical terrain adjustments, with boundaries largely stabilized since the early . An wall erected in 1711 delineates the main , bounded to the northeast by the A428 , east by the Harlestone , southwest by the Harlestone-Great Brington , and northwest by a minor , reflecting enduring legal demarcations preserved in estate records at the Record Office. These perimeters, corroborated by the 1778 estate map held in the same archive, indicate minimal boundary shifts post-enclosure periods, underscoring the Spencers' continuous ownership since 1508. Early landscaping post-1666 emphasized formal French-style elements, including drainage of the original and creation of a south forecourt, potentially under the influence of , with avenues of ash, oak, and elm planted around 1680—later replanted with limes and London planes. A 2.5-meter-high, 200-meter-long scarp south of the house was engineered to enhance southward views, altering the natural topography for visual prominence. By the late , Lancelot 'Capability' Brown advised on redesign during his 1780 visit, though implementation followed Henry Holland's 1790 plan, which included infilling the moat and establishing a layout around 1786 under Samuel Lapidge, promoting naturalistic curves over rigid geometry. The 19th century saw further refinements for efficiency and ornament, including the construction of an in the 1820s and formal gardens west and north of the house designed by W. M. Teulon in 1860, featuring terraced parterres and clipped evergreens to frame the house against the broader park. The Round Oval Lake was created in 1868, with subsequent cleaning and refilling to integrate it as a focal water feature amid wooded clumps, as evidenced by maps from 1886 onward showing stabilized paths winding through these plantings for pedestrian access and framed prospects. These paths, detailed in the 1778 survey and later OS editions (1886 and 1901), traverse copses and glades planted for effect, balancing utility in drainage and access with aesthetic seclusion. Historical surveys reveal deliberate wooding patterns, with strategic tree belts enhancing the estate's undulating terrain while mitigating wind exposure, a practice rooted in 18th-century principles of improvement for both visual harmony and estate functionality. Such modifications, avoiding radical disruptions seen elsewhere in , preserved the park's integrity as a cohesive designed , as confirmed by archival mappings.

Agricultural Management and Rewilding Efforts

The Althorp estate, encompassing approximately 13,000 acres, has historically relied on tenant farming, with the acquiring the land in 1508 using profits from and initially leasing parcels to tenants for agricultural production. By the , the estate included consolidated farms worked by tenants, yielding rents that supported estate operations, though direct management varied under successive earls. Much of the farmland remains let to tenants today, but the home farm—comprising around 2,600 to 3,000 acres managed directly by the estate—has seen a shift away from conventional chemical-intensive crop monocultures toward mixed organic and regenerative practices since approximately 2021. This transition, led by estate initiatives under Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, emphasizes soil health, biodiversity enhancement, and reduced synthetic inputs, aligning with regenerative agriculture principles that prioritize long-term ecosystem resilience over short-term maximum yields. Specific practices include seed inoculation trials for improved germination and collaboration with experts in organic conversion, aiming to restore land fertility depleted by prior intensive methods. While organic systems can initially reduce crop yields by 20-30% compared to conventional farming due to the absence of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, proponents argue that regenerative approaches mitigate this through enhanced soil organic matter, which boosts water retention and microbial activity, potentially stabilizing or increasing productivity over 5-10 years. At Althorp, the focus on mixed farming—including livestock integration like recent lamb introductions—seeks to balance these trade-offs by fostering natural pest control and nutrient cycling, though critics have noted high upfront costs and implementation challenges on marginal lands. The economic rationale includes adapting to rising input costs, regulatory pressures on chemicals, and burdens on large estates, which incentivize sustainable models to preserve land value without . Regenerative efforts at Althorp, such as farm-scale composting and cover cropping, aim to cut long-term expenses by minimizing external dependencies, though the full conversion of the home farm remains ongoing as of 2024, with demonstrations highlighting improved habitats as a conservation byproduct. This approach reflects broader estate trends toward amid declining traditional farming viability, prioritizing causal over immediate output maximization.

Diana's Burial Site and Memorial Features

Princess Diana was interred on 31 August 1997 on a small, tree-covered in the Oval Lake at Althorp Estate, her family's ancestral home in , . The choice of this secluded location, accessible only by boat for family members, was deliberately designed to shield the site from public access and media intrusion, providing a private sanctuary amid the intense scrutiny following her death. The grave itself features a simple black marble marker engraved with her name and dates, surrounded by white roses and wildflowers, eschewing elaborate monuments in favor of understated dignity. Overlooking the lake from the shore stands a neoclassical , erected as a to Diana, which serves as a focal point for family reflection without allowing direct views of the island. In June 2025, the temple was repainted, restoring its white facade for the summer season, as announced by Earl Charles Spencer, Diana's brother and custodian of the estate. This maintenance work underscores ongoing care for the site's features, countering earlier of —such as 2014 reports of algal growth in the lake by Diana's former chef , whose personal grievances may have colored his observations. Subsequent estate investments, including a multi-million-pound lakeside revamp initiated in 2016 following public complaints, have addressed environmental concerns like , ensuring the site's preservation without compromising its intended . These efforts reflect a commitment to rational privacy measures, prioritizing long-term tranquility over transient public demands.

Public Access and Estate Operations

Tourism and Seasonal Openings

Althorp House and grounds open to day visitors during a restricted summer season each year, spanning approximately four to six weeks from early July to late August. In 2025, the estate admitted the public from 3 July to 31 August, after which it closed until the following year. Advance online booking through the official website is mandatory, with tickets allocated to manage capacity on predefined routes through the house and parkland. Visitor access emphasizes the Spencer family's 500-year tenure at the estate, with self-guided tours augmented by on-site guides who provide historical context on the , collections, and lineage rather than focusing exclusively on more recent associations. The grounds route includes the parkland and lake, traversable by foot or via provided transport options, operating daily from around 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. during open periods. This seasonal limitation ensures controlled footfall, heightening the sense of exclusivity, though precise attendance figures remain undisclosed by the estate management. Post-season, the property reverts to private family use, with no public access outside these dates.

Exhibitions and Visitor Amenities

The Althorp estate offers guided tours of the as primary exhibitions, showcasing rooms filled with heirlooms including paintings, ceramics, and furniture arranged to illustrate over 500 years of aristocratic history and continuity. These displays emphasize educational narratives curated by the current Earl Spencer, highlighting ancestral achievements in , , and patronage without modern interpretive overlays. Visitors access approximately 20 staterooms, such as the 115-foot Picture Gallery, where artifacts like 17th-century portraits and rare books provide context on the family's role in . Exhibitions incorporate elements tied to Diana, Princess of Wales, through integrated storytelling in childhood-associated areas, featuring select personal correspondence and mementos that underscore her upbringing amid the estate's traditions. The estate has collaborated on external touring exhibits like "Diana: A Celebration," which display 28 of her dresses, letters, and jewelry from Althorp's archives, with such initiatives donating a verified 10% of proceeds to charities supporting causes she championed, including AIDS research and landmine clearance. On-site, these themes reinforce the house's role as a living archive rather than a static museum, open seasonally from July 1 to August 29. Visitor amenities support extended stays with a café and tearoom serving fresh, locally sourced options like cream teas and light lunches, priced from £8 to £25 per person. A stocks souvenirs tied to the exhibitions, such as replicas of family and estate-themed merchandise. Free parking is provided at the West Gate, with a short walk to the house; facilities include accessible restrooms and paths for those with mobility needs. Following the May 2025 arson incident at a remote , 2025 operations introduced enhanced pre-visit booking prompts via the estate's website to streamline entry and ensure smooth navigation of amenities amid heightened awareness.

Economic Sustainability and Upkeep Challenges

The maintenance of Althorp, a Grade I listed stately home spanning approximately 13,000 acres with 90 rooms, imposes substantial ongoing costs, estimated at around £130,250 monthly for basic operations including utilities, staffing, and preservation. These expenses are compounded by the need for periodic major restorations, as evidenced by continuous repair work undertaken since , inherited the estate in 1992, focusing on returning it to its historical condition without relying on external subsidies. Previous generations, such as Diana's father, , resorted to selling family treasures to cover upkeep after inheriting in 1975 amid post-war financial strains. To address these fiscal pressures, Althorp employs a self-reliant model diversified across , , and limited , explicitly avoiding full handover to public bodies like the that could mitigate (IHT) liabilities through unconditional transfer. In the UK, historic estates qualify for conditional IHT exemptions under guidelines if they provide public access for a specified number of days annually, balancing preservation incentives with deferral rather than avoidance via outright sale or donation. Althorp has adhered to this by opening the house and grounds seasonally from July 1 to August 31 since 1953, initially to generate revenue for taxes, attracting up to 150,000 visitors in peak years to offset costs without year-round commercialization. Charles Spencer has publicly underscored the necessity of this approach, stating that the estate sustains itself through "a mixture of farming, and ," rejecting the notion that the property should provide personal livelihood and emphasizing family stewardship over dependency on state intervention. This strategy aligns with broader challenges for privately held heritage properties, where IHT rates of up to 40% on estates exceeding £325,000 per individual can force asset absent reliefs tied to public benefit, yet Spencer's model prioritizes autonomy, with tourism revenue supplemented by event rentals and agricultural yields to fund repairs amid rising energy and material costs.

Controversies and Criticisms

Debates on Memorial Access and Privacy

Following the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, on August 31, 1997, her brother Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, selected a secluded island in the Oval Lake at Althorp for her burial to ensure privacy and security, citing the need for the site to be "properly looked after by her family and visited in privacy by her sons." This decision was influenced by immediate post-mortem threats from paparazzi intrusions, which had contributed to the circumstances of her fatal car crash in Paris, prompting a shift from an initial plan to inter her in the nearby Great Brington church vault. The island's isolation, accessible only by rowboat for family members, was implemented to mitigate risks of vandalism or unauthorized access, with Spencer later noting multiple intrusion attempts by outsiders. The no-public-access policy has been consistently maintained, reinforced by a 1992 UK government agreement that limits Althorp estate openings to and annually, a restriction Spencer clarified in September 2025 as preventing full public availability to preserve family privacy amid historical security concerns. While visitors may view the lake from the shore and pay respects at a nearby memorial temple, the burial island remains off-limits, allowing Spencer to visit daily without public interference. Proponents of the , including Spencer and family traditionalists, argue it upholds aristocratic to private estates and safeguards the site's sanctity against exploitation, emphasizing causal links to past media that endangered Diana's life. Critics, often from egalitarian perspectives, contend that Diana's status as a global warrants broader access for admirers, with occasional complaints surfacing about perceived neglect—such as overgrown vegetation around the island in the mid-2010s—prompting Spencer to authorize multimillion-pound renovations in 2016 to restore without altering access rules. These viewpoints highlight tensions between familial control over private land and public expectations of openness for a figure whose life was defined by intense scrutiny.

Commercialization and Public Perception

The commercialization of Althorp House through seasonal public access has elicited mixed perceptions, with critics viewing initiatives as exploitative, particularly in leveraging interest in ' memorial, while supporters argue it pragmatically sustains a 13,000-acre Grade I listed estate spanning over 500 years of stewardship. Following Diana's death in 1997, the estate opened to visitors in July 1998 with an admission fee of £9.50 for adults, prompting accusations that , was profiting from his sister's legacy by restricting direct access to her island burial site and charging for proximity views and exhibitions. This model, however, aligns with broader practices among British historic houses, where visitor revenue—supplemented by events like the annual Althorp Literary Festival introduced in the 1990s—offsets substantial upkeep costs, averting the need for further asset sales beyond the 2010 auction of a painting to fund estate preservation. Public reviews often highlight a perceived imbalance, with platforms like featuring complaints that the experience feels "disappointing" beyond the lakeside memorial vista, citing limited house interiors access, overpriced amenities, and a focus on Diana overshadowing the Spencers' pre-20th-century heritage of political influence, agricultural innovation, and art collections. Scholarly analyses frame Althorp within "morbid tourism," a niche drawing visitors to sites of , yet this influx has enabled targeted restorations, such as and enhancements, countering isolated allegations like 2014 claims of algal overgrowth at the burial pond by counter-evidence of sustained landscaping and security investments. Overall, while early drew ethical scrutiny for blending reverence with revenue—evident in debates over fee allocations, where only a portion supported charities—empirical upkeep outcomes demonstrate tourism's role in preserving Althorp's integrity against fiscal pressures facing similar estates, fostering a shift toward viewing it as a viable heritage model rather than mere exploitation.

Security Issues and Recent Incidents

In May 2025, a derelict farmhouse on the Althorp Estate in Mill Lane, Kingsthorpe, , was deliberately set ablaze in a suspected attack, with the fire reported around 1:30 a.m. . The incident, approximately five miles from Althorp House itself, prompted an investigation by , who treated it as amid evidence of . Earl Charles Spencer, custodian of the estate, publicly attributed the attack to vandals, expressing frustration but confirming no injuries or damage to core estate structures. Earlier incidents underscore ongoing rural crime risks at the 13,000-acre estate, including thefts of valuable assets like machinery, which led to enhanced security measures in September 2024. The estate implemented CESAR electronic tagging and Datatag forensic marking systems on equipment to deter and aid recovery from thefts, reflecting a proactive private security approach amid limited rural policing resources. In June 2024, police were summoned after unauthorized vehicles were dumped on estate grounds, highlighting vulnerabilities to opportunistic intrusions. Security around Diana, of Wales's burial site on a in the Oval Lake remains stringent, with constant private patrols preventing access and mitigating threats linked to the site's high-profile status. No breaches have been reported there, though the estate balances private guardianship with occasional police involvement for external incidents, avoiding reliance on full-time state policing due to the remote location. Estate statements indicate these events have not disrupted or operations, with repairs and fortifications proceeding without disclosure of costs.

Inheritance Practices and Family Legacy

The Spencer family has maintained the practice of male primogeniture for the inheritance of Althorp since acquiring the estate in 1508, whereby the title, house, and core lands pass undivided to the eldest legitimate son, bypassing daughters and younger sons to prevent fragmentation of family assets. This tradition, rooted in English aristocratic custom, ensured the Spencers' wealth accumulation from sheep farming and land management endured through centuries of economic pressures, including agricultural shifts and inheritance taxes that dismantled many divided estates. Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, inherited Althorp in 1992 following his father's death, continuing the direct male line despite having three elder daughters from his first marriage. He affirmed in 2019 his intent to uphold this precedent, designating his son Louis Frederick John Spencer, Viscount Althorp (born March 14, 1994), as over his sisters, citing the practical necessity of concentrated stewardship for the estate's 13,000-acre expanse and £100 million valuation. Louis, an pursuing roles under a , remains positioned to succeed, with 2025 reports confirming no deviation from this succession amid public interest tied to the estate's connection to . Princes and Harry, as Diana's sons, hold no claim under Spencer entailment, which traces strictly through the earldom's lineage rather than maternal descent, excluding them despite emotional ties to Althorp as Diana's childhood home and burial site. This exclusion aligns with historical precedents where collateral female lines yielded to to safeguard estate viability; for instance, fragmented holdings in other noble families post-20th-century death duties often forced sales, whereas intact successions like the Spencers' preserved operational scale for , , and heritage management. Critiques of as discriminatory overlook its causal efficacy in averting dilution: equal division among multiple heirs would likely reduce Althorp to untenable parcels, risking its loss to development or institutional buyers, as occurred with over 1,000 British country houses between 1880 and 1955 due to subdivided inheritances and fiscal burdens. The Spencers' adherence thus sustains a continuous legacy, with Louis positioned to manage the estate's diversified operations, including farming and public access, without the administrative fragmentation that egalitarian distributions have historically induced in comparable noble properties.

Folklore

Reported Hauntings and Legends

One of the earliest reported hauntings at Althorp occurred in the early , when a guest named Mr. Drury, later Drury, observed an apparition in his guest bedroom. The figure, described as a man wearing a striped and while holding a , silently entered the room, lowered the light, and proceeded toward the dressing area before vanishing. This entity was identified as a deceased groom whose duty had been to extinguish candles throughout the house to mitigate fire risks, a concern emphasized by the of Spencer at the time. Similar accounts of a groom's persist in family lore, attributed to a favorite servant of the fifth Spencer, who resided at Althorp from 1857 until his death. Witnesses have described the apparition clad in a long red adorned with stitching, carrying a as he continues his former task of snuffing out candles. In one instance recounted by Charles Spencer, the ninth , a visitor encountered the figure during a weekend stay in the late —the first reported sighting in approximately 50 years—and described it as "extremely charming," though details of their interaction were hazy. Spencer himself learned of the legend from historical press clippings just prior to this event. Another recurring legend involves a young girl in pre-Victorian grey clothing with "flappy shoes," sighted entering the Long Picture Gallery through a small doorway. Preceding the First World War, a daughter of the reported seeing the figure smile silently before it disappeared, evoking no sense of threat. No matching or historical record identifies her, though she is speculated to be an early Spencer child. Following the death of Albert Edward John Spencer, the seventh , in 1975, family members and the butler's wife reported sightings of his apparition within the house. The figure appeared soon after his passing, smiling silently without speaking, consistent with his documented affinity for Althorp's historical artifacts and lineage.

Historical Context and Skeptical Analysis

Reports of activity at Althorp House, the ancestral seat of the since the 16th century, trace back to at least the early 19th century, when a guest of Lord Lyttelton—son-in-law to the 2nd Spencer—claimed to witness an apparition. In 1993, Charles Spencer, the 9th , referenced a persistent of a red-coated the estate, linking it to historical figures or unexplained presences amid the house's long occupancy and renovations. These accounts align with patterns in other stately homes, where aging structures—Althorp's core dating to 1508 with neoclassical updates by Roger Morris in the 1730s—amplify ordinary phenomena into spectral narratives. Skeptical examination attributes such experiences to verifiable mundane mechanisms rather than disembodied spirits. In historic estates like Althorp, low-frequency generated by wind through expansive grounds or settling foundations can induce physiological unease, vibrations, and visual distortions misinterpreted as hauntings, without requiring agency. Psychological plays a key role: visitors primed by lore, as with Althorp's guided tours emphasizing family history, report anomalies at higher rates due to expectation bias, a effect documented in controlled settings where environmental cues alone suffice. Hoaxes or embellishments, common in tourism-dependent sites, further erode credibility, though no specific frauds are confirmed at Althorp; structural drafts, creaking timbers from centuries-old oak framing, and variable lighting in vast interiors provide prosaic origins for shadows and sounds. Empirical scrutiny reveals a stark absence of instrumental validation for Althorp's claims, contrasting with the estate's well-documented of archaeological finds and architectural records verified through excavation and archives. No peer-reviewed studies or geophysical surveys have detected anomalous energies, electromagnetic spikes, or ectoplasmic residues here, unlike measurable events such as the 2022 Bronze Age discoveries on the grounds. Belief persistence owes more to cultural tradition than data, with surveys showing ghost convictions correlate with low rather than repeatable evidence. While marginally enhances Althorp's visitor draw—annual openings since the focus primarily on Spencer artifacts and Diana memorials—the estate's economic viability rests on tangible heritage, not unverified specters, underscoring that truth claims demand falsifiable proof over anecdote.

References

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