Hanwell Castle
Has been described as a Questionable Masonry Castle, and also as a Questionable Fortified Manor House
There are masonry ruins/remnants remains
Name | Hanwell Castle |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Oxfordshire |
Modern Authority | Oxfordshire |
1974 Authority | Oxfordshire |
Civil Parish | Hanwell |
Country house, now 3 dwellings. Former great house of which only the south-west tower and south range remains of a 2-storey house built round a courtyard with main entrance on west. Begun c.1498 for William Cope, cofferer to Henry VII. Mostly demolished in C18. East wing and restorations c.1903. Left part. Complex range incorporating C15, C19 and C20 builds. Squared coursed ironstone. Steeply pitched stone slate roof laid to diminishing courses. Stone and brick ridge stacks. Double depth plan. 2 storeys. 2-window range. Entrance porch has plank door and 4-centred wood head. Front has C20 windows with wood lintels. Rear has Tudor windows some renewed. Central part: long rectangular south range. Diaper patterned blue and red brick. Limestone dressings. Steeply pitched stone slate roof laid to diminishing courses. Brick ridge and end stacks. 2 storeys. 5-window range. Gabled porch has entrance with 4-centred doorway. Ground floor has C20 windows with wood lintels. First floor has 2- 3- and 4-light C15/C16 windows, some with King mullions and an oriel window. Tower on right. Red brick with diaper patterns in blue brick and ironstone quoins. 3 storeys. 2 corner turrets. Crenellated parapets. South side has 4-light C15/C16 windows that are on ground floor transomed. Interior not inspected but south range is noted as having 2 large kitchen fireplaces placed back to back; plain moulded stone doorways; late marble fireplaces. Tower noted as having contemporary stone fireplaces on upper floors and newel stair in north-west turret. James I visited in 1605, 1612, and 1624 Leland records the castle as a very pleasant and gallant house in c.1540. The earliest example of C15 brickwork in north Oxfordshire. The C20 addition on east is not of special architectural interest. (Listed Building Report)
15th-16th century brickwork with stone quoins in SW tower which is the one remaining of the original four
The castle was originally quadrangular with a frontage of 109ft. There is Tudor work on the N side including some stone mullioned windows. The caste was partially pulled down c1777 and restored in 1903 with additions on the E. The original gate piers remain. Visited by James I in 1605, 1612 and 1624. Grade II-star. (MHLG 1899/11/A undated)
The surviving tower at SP 4362 4360 and brickwork forming what is now the N front are the sole external Tudor remains of "Hanwell Castle". This was evidently a castelled manor house of considerable pretensions and is of architectural interest. The S side has been rebuilt or renovated and is of stone construction as are the modern additions (with Tudor style windows), to the E. See GP's. From SP 4367 4370 to SP 4415 4353 a string of very large fishponds occupies an area of about 13 acres. They are up to 2.0m deep, all but one being dry. Their size precludes normal domestic use and suggests that they were either partly ornamental or formed a fish farm.
Hanwell "Castle", originally known as Hanwell House, a two-storeyed building with decorative battlements and octagonal towers, was begun c.1498 by William Cope, cofferer to Henry VII. The W. front was symmetrical, with a gatehouse and an oriel window. In the late 18th century the house was mostly demolished and the remains turned into a farmhouse. Surviving features of the original building include the SW tower and the S. wing running back from it. (Pevsner)
Five fishponds at Hanwell Castle were investigated in 1981. According to R. Plot there were waterworks in a "House of Diversion" built on an island in one of the fishponds, where there was a ball tossed by a column of water and an artificial shower. He was probably referring to the westernmost pond, which is still full of water and has an island. The ponds must date from at least the 18th century because nobody can remember them being used as fishponds in the Victorian period. (Steane) (PastScape)
Not scheduled
This is a Grade 2* listed building protected by law
Historic England Scheduled Monument Number
Historic England Listed Building number(s)
Images Of England
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SP436436 |
Latitude | 52.089038848877 |
Longitude | -1.36460995674133 |
Eastings | 443630 |
Northings | 243600 |