Nutfield Priory is a Grade II listed building in the Tandridge local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 August 2011. A Victorian Mansion. 1 related planning application.
Nutfield Priory
- WRENN ID
- ragged-spandrel-hawk
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Tandridge
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 August 2011
- Type
- Mansion
- Period
- Victorian
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
Nutfield Priory is a mansion built between 1872 and 1874, designed by John Gibson for Joshua Fielden in a mixture of Gothic and Neo-Tudor styles. It incorporates cloisters and a conservatory dating from 1858-9 by John Norton, which were part of an earlier house owned by H E Gurney. Minor 20th-century alterations have been made, and the 1960s north extension is not of special interest.
The building is constructed of Kentish ragstone rubble with Reigate stone dressings, a tiled roof and clustered brick chimneystacks. It is an asymmetrical building, mainly of two storeys and attics, with irregular fenestration.
Exterior
The entrance front faces north, with principal rooms mainly on the west side and service rooms to the east. The most prominent feature is a projecting six-storey tower over the main entrance and adjoining great hall window. The tower has a crenellated parapet and pseudo-machicolations with gargoyle waterspouts at the corners. The upper floors have elaborate paired traceried windows and paired bands between floors. The entrance has a pointed arch with moulded half-columns and the text 'there's a divinity that shapes our ends rough hew them how we may', with quatrefoils beneath the dripmoulding featuring emblems including an elephant, lion, owl, book and scales. Underneath is a vaulted vestibule with roof bosses leading to double doors which are half-glazed with carved cinquefoil heads and similar sidelights. To the right, terminating this elevation, are two gable ends, and a flying buttress from the tower connects with one of them. To the left are three paired elliptical-headed windows on the second floor, and below are the tall windows of the Great Hall. The central part of the window consists of a projecting square bay with carved parapet, carved corner waterspouts and the inscription 'When Adam Delved and Eve span who was then the gentleman'. The windows are of three tiers with traceried heads and leaded lights. The side windows are similarly paired windows of three tiers with traceried heads but have quatrefoils at the top. To the left are four gables with moulded finials and two or three-light mullioned casement windows. A projection of two bays at the eastern end has a similar gable and a gabled dormer, two-light mullioned casements and a projecting corridor at ground level with arched windows divided by buttresses. Attached to the north is the 1970 extension.
The west elevation has a projecting section of three storeys and attics with a gable, three-light window to the second floor and two-storey canted bay below with moulded panels, gargoyle waterspouts and traceried window. The adjoining bay has a flat roof, two flat-arched windows with tracery and an elliptical-headed entrance with sidelight. To the right is the return of the south side with gable end with clustered chimneystack and a projecting bay on the ground floor.
The south or garden front divides into two sections. The western part projects and is of five bays. The western bay has a gable with moulded finial and a three-storey four-light canted bay below with decorated panels between the floors and cinquefoil heads to the ground-floor window. The next two bays have a two-storey square bay on the left with traceried heads to the ground-floor window and entrance to the right with a quatrefoil above the doorcase and traceried sidelights. The penultimate gable has elliptical-headed windows to the upper floors and an elaborate four-light canted bay to the ground floor with traceried heads. The end bay has a first-floor oriel with crenellated parapet and traceried window. Below are three traceried windows divided by buttresses. The eastern part of the south front has a projecting ground-floor conservatory with an entrance in a projecting central section with the initials JF carved above the arched doorcase and two paired windows with cinquefoil-headed lights divided by buttresses and end finials. Set back on either side are four similar windows. Late 19th-century photographs show the conservatory originally had a domed roof, later replaced with a flat roof. Behind is a slender bell turret with ogee-shaped roof, three gables and a square tower with crenellated parapet. The south side terminates in a gabled former billiard room.
The east side has a simple arched entrance and two lower single-storey wings, the northern one with an end brick chimneystack.
Subsidiary Features
On the north side of the entrance courtyard is a stone screen wall of ragstone rubble with ashlar dressings. The wall has triangular stone coping and ten buttresses. In the centre is an arched entrance to a flight of stone steps. At the ends are chamfered ashlar piers with decorated pyramidal caps. To the south of the house is a terrace wall of Reigate stone with two sets of steps with moulded coping terminating in integral octagonal piers. At the east and west ends of the lower terrace are three-sided rectangular stone alcoves with moulded coping, also terminating in integral octagonal piers, containing stone benches. To the west of the house are two similar sets of stone steps to those on the south side of the house.
Interior
Entrance through the main entrance under the tower on the north side leads into a vestibule with a stone fireplace with carved spandrels, engaged composite columns and Minton tiles, a boarded ceiling and similar double doors to the outer door, except with quatrefoil designs to the fanlight. This leads directly to the main staircase which is of dogleg type with elaborate traceried balustrading, square newel posts with ball finials and dado panelling. The ceiling is boarded and at the base of the staircase is a pair of pointed arches supported on a circular pink marble column. To the east is the two-storey high Great Hall, originally approached through an open arch which had doors inserted in the 20th century. Within the Great Hall this arch has engaged colonnettes with quatrefoils and mouchettes in the spandrels and a text above 'God's Providence is mine inheritance' and at the upper level are three open arches with colonnettes. The boarded ceiling has an elaborate octagonal carved wooden and gilded pendant centrepiece which blew hot air into the room and staircase. There is a carved wooden balcony to the south, the walls have tall elaborate panelling and on the south wall is a carved four-centred arched stone fireplace. The east wall has an arched recess housing a contemporary organ. The organ case has elaborate carved gables and gilded and ornamented pipes. The Great Hall windows on the north side, originally with motifs designed by F R Pickersgill commemorating the Fielden family, were superseded, probably in the 1920s, by armorial shields of prominent medieval English and continental families. In the south-east corner are two arched doorcases. One leads into a south vestibule with pointed-arched stone roof with trefoil and quatrefoil motifs leading to two principal rooms.
To the east is the former dining room, now bar lounge, which has an elaborate gilded cornice and a stone fireplace with four-centred arch, panel of quatrefoils and colonnettes with floral capitals and shafts of pink marble. A shelf above is also in pink marble. A door in the south-east corner with quatrefoil and mouchette carved decoration above the arch and traceried heads to the door leads to the cloisters which have ribbed vaults with carved stone bosses and Minton-tiled floors. At the eastern end is the three-bay rectangular former conservatory which has engaged stone colonnettes and boarded ceiling. An entrance at the eastern end leads to the former billiard room, now Bletchingly Room, which does not retain any original fittings.
To the west of the former dining room is the former Library. This has a boarded ceiling with rib and bosses, built-in bookcases with ornamented cornices, a stone four-centred arched fireplace with mirrored overmantel with arches and colonnettes, panelled shutters and nine-panelled doors. At the western end of the south side is the Gibson Room, formerly a drawing room. This has a strapwork ceiling and Louis Quinze style panelling of polished bird's-eye maple and rosewood relief incorporating large pier mirrors flanking the carved window embrasures. There is a richly decorated cornice and reeded pilasters flank the fireplace. The fireplace is not the original shown in a late 19th-century photograph but is an Italian white-and-buff-carved and inlaid marble fireplace. The Worth Room at the north-west corner has an elaborate floral cornice, a white marble fireplace with paterae and console brackets and a tall Chubb's safe, possibly for safeguarding guns. The other doorway leading off the Great Hall leads to a corridor. The room to the east of the Great Hall, possibly a study or morning room originally, has a four-centred arched stone fireplace with stylised-floral frieze, carved spandrels and pink-marble shelf, brackets and pilasters with Minton tiles to the cheeks and hearth. Further adjoining rooms to the east with cornices are reported. On the first floor the north-western bedroom has a decorative cornice and nine-panelled door. The south-western bedroom has Louis Seize style panelling.
Detailed Attributes
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