Next week's Country Life will herald the sale of one of Nottinghamshire's most important houses, Grade II*-listed Osberton Hall at Osberton, near Worksop, following the death of its sporting owner, Tony Budge, in February this year. Knight Frank (020-7629 8171) and Shield Estates (0114-257 1000) quote a guide price of £3.35 million for the imposing brick and stone house, with its fine Dower House, magnificent stable courtyard and 47 acres of grounds, which were the heart of the Foljambe family's surrounding Osberton estate before being sold to Mr Budge in 1987.
The dynamic Foljambe family were major landowners in the region as far back as 1272, when Sir Thomas Foljambe was bailiff of the High Peak in Derbyshire. From the 18th century onwards, the family intermarried with the Thornhaughs, original owners of Osberton, the Saviles of Rufford, and other noble houses. The architectural lineage of Osberton Hall is no less illustrious.
In 1792, plans to build a new mansion at Osberton on the site of an earlier 18th-century house were commissioned from William Porden, a pupil of James Wyatt, who was appointed surveyor of the Grosvenor estate in Mayfair, and designed the stables, riding school and tennis court at the Royal Pavilion at Brighton for the Prince of Wales in 1804-08. Porden's scheme for a new seven-bay house was never implemented, but, in 1806, the architect and Classical scholar William Wilkins, pioneer of the Greek Revival in Britain, remodelled the Hall for F. F. Foljambe along the lines of Porden's original design.
In 1848, Ambrose Poynter, who carried out major alterations at Upton Pynes, Devon (Property Market, November 17), added a top floor to the service wing. By the 1870s, Francis John Savile Foljambe-described in L. Jack's The Great Houses of Nottinghamshire and the County Families (1881) as ‘an ardent sportsman, tall, broad-shouldered and clean of limb'-owned some 10,000 acres of land in Nottinghamshire, 5,368 acres in the West Riding of Yorkshire, and houses in both counties, including Monks' Tower near Lincoln.
Between 1872 and 1880, he engaged the eminent architect John Macvicar Anderson, a close friend of Richard Norman Shaw, to substantially remodel and extend the hall. The portico was replaced by a porte-cochère in Roche Abbey stone, the terrace was extended, and the approaches to the house were altered and improved to take advantage of the ‘fine sylvan scenery'. A new wing was added on the north-west front, comprising a dining room, a spacious library and other apartments; at the same time, the old library was converted to a billiard room.
The former drawing room was replaced by ‘a magnificent saloon or central hall, the most sumptuous apartment in the whole house'. A massive oak staircase led to the gallery where the family portraits were hung, and the ground floor still houses some of the Foljambe family's extraordinary collection of stuffed British birds.
Osberton's 1967 listing describes the Hall's magnificent interior as being ‘exceptionally well-preserved'. In addition to its reception rooms, the main house has seven principal bedroom suites, and 12 secondary bedrooms. Other principal buildings, including the four-bedroom Dower House, the Victorian stone stable block designed by William Lindley, and the former service wing converted in the 1970s by G. M. T. Foljambe into an indoor-pool complex, squash court and gymnasium, are listed Grade II.
The Foljambe men were fanatical country sportsmen. Successive estate owners were masters of the Grove Hunt, which was founded by George Savile Foljambe in 1827 and amalgamated with a neighbouring pack to form the Grove and Rufford in 1952. They were also model landowners who took a keen interest in the estate farms. The Osberton Jersey herd, started by F. J. S. Foljambe in 1869 to provide milk and butter for his household and employees, is one of the oldest in the country, although the milking element was largely dispersed when the hall was sold in 1987.
Osberton's sporting tradition was carried on by the estate's new owner, who in his heyday was the second-biggest British racehorse owner behind the late Robert Sangster, with a string of successful flat and jumping horses trained by Richard Hannon and Jimmy Fitzgerald. Sadly, Mr Budge's aviation, engineering and mining company fell victim to the recession of the early 1990s, signalling the end of his formal connection with racing, but not his family's affection for a remarkable house, which continues to reflect the commitment of successive generations to a way of life that survives against the odds in the English countryside.
From http://www.countrylife.co.uk/property_news/article/509654/Historic-country-houses-with-a-sporting-history.html Osberton,Hall,
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My ancestor, Joseph Bolles was born at Osberton Hall in 1608. The Bolles family lived there for about a century until Josesph inherited it from his older brother, John Bolles, Esquire. Joseph sold it to a female family member in 1666. It seems likely that Joseph, the youngest of nine children, moved to Wells, Maine in 1640 never expecting to inherit this estate. He had children and grandchildren in the New World at the time he inherited Osberton and some holdings at Shoreditch, so he opted to remain in the New World. As an architect working in London in 2007-8, I dreamed of visiting Osberton Hall but realized that that might not be possible since it was under private ownership. Now living in Colorado in the States and learning of its availability, I would love to see it fall back into the ownership of our family. I sent out an email tonight to various family members letting them know of its availability.
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