Cowick Hall

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2022}}

{{Use British English|date=February 2022}}

{{Infobox building

| name = Cowick Hall

|image = West Cowick, Cowick Hall - geograph.org.uk - 1383755.jpg

|caption =

|alt=

|building_type = Country house

| map_type = East Riding of Yorkshire

|coordinates = {{coord|53.683046|-1.007073|display=inline}}

|location=Snaith, East Riding of Yorkshire

| ren_architect = James Paine

| client = John Dawnay, 1st Viscount Downe

| current_tenants = Croda International

| renovation_date = 1752–1760

|completion_date ={{circa|1660-90}}

| style =Georgian

|embedded={{infobox designation list

| embed=yes

| designation1 = Grade I

| designation1_date = 23 April 1952

| designation1_number = 1083323

}}

}}

Cowick Hall is a 17th-century Georgian country house in the town of Snaith, located between the villages of East and West Cowick, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The house is Grade I listed and several outbuildings on the estate are Grade II listed.{{NHLE|desc=Cowick Hall, Church Road|num=1083323|access-date=9 September 2015}} Once home to the Viscounts Downe, today it serves as the corporate headquarters of chemical company Croda International.

History

In the 14th century, the Cowick lands came into the hands of the Dawnay family, whose chief seats came to be Cowick Hall, Dawnay Lodge and Danby Castle. The Dawnays descended from the lords of the manor at Shannock (or Shunock) in Sheviock, Cornwall. During the reign of Richard II, Thomas Dawnay, younger brother of Sir John Dawnay, married Elizabeth, the daughter and heiress of John Newton of Snaith, Yorkshire. Thomas Dawnay settled in the Yorkshire parish of Escrick. His grandson Sir John Dawnay was the first of several Dawnays to serve as High Sheriff of Yorkshire.{{cite book |authorlink=Edward Kimber|first=Edward |last=Kimber|first2=John |last2=Almon |author2link=John Almon |title=The Peerage of Ireland: A Genealogical and Historical Account... |volume=2|date=1768|pages=56–57|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JW8UAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA57|access-date=11 September 2015}}

Cowick Hall was built in the late 17th century for John Dawnay, 1st Viscount Downe. The original architect is unknown, but the main house was significantly altered from 1752 to 1760 by James Paine for the third Viscount, including internal remodelling, rebuilding the south entrance and resetting the roof balustrade. Italian architect Joseph Bonomi designed additional alterations in the 1790s for the fifth Viscount, including redesigning the west staircase and an addition of the external south gallery. Bonodi returned for more work between 1804 and 1811, when he also designed the two-storey U-shaped coachhouse and stables.

In 1869, the ninth viscount sold the estate for unknown reasons to Henry Shaw, a cotton spinner and also a fruit and vegetable exporter from Cleckheaton. The records from the sale described it thus:

The Hall is situated in the midst of a noble park of about 330 acres in extent... and is approached through a long avenue of stately forest trees... The outbuildings consist of superior stabling for twenty horses... two saddle rooms, two large carriage houses, four grooms rooms... bakehouse and brewhouse... The fruit and vegetable gardens are extensive and productive, and enclosed by high brick walls, flued throughout and partially covered by fruit trees.

File:Cowick Hall c 1900.jpg

To that Shaw added a two-storey, red-brick dower house in 1870. Shaw died suddenly in 1871, leaving the house to his brother Benjamin, who lived at Cowick Hall until 1889. Benjamin Shaw remodelled the interior of the main house, and during this process "destroyed much of the splendour of the house," according to the Bishop of Sheffield David Lunn, who wrote a history of the surrounding area.{{cite book|last1=Lunn|first1=David|author-link=David Lunn|title=Rivers, Rectors and Abbots|url=http://www.goole-on-the-web.org.uk/main.php?key=697|access-date=11 September 2015|year=1990|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171213213215/http://www.goole-on-the-web.org.uk/main.php?key=697|archive-date=13 December 2017|url-status=dead}}

Despite the unfortunate changes to the interior, Nikolaus Pevsner wrote that the main fronts of Cowick Hall were among the most accomplished 17th-century country house designs in England. Pevsner noted the decorated "cornice supported on pairs of large acanthus brackets above each pilaster," with the giant carved and painted achievement of the Dawnay family with their motto TIMET PUDOREM ("he fears shame") above the door.

In 1889, Samuel Joseph Cooper, an industrialist from Barnsley, purchased the home. He died in 1913 and thereafter Cowick Hall fell into neglect. It changed hands several times and at one point pigs lived in the cellars of the main house. In 1954, plans to demolish Cowick Hall took root.

The house was rescued, however, in 1955, when it became the headquarters for local chemical company Croda International, which still occupies the house today.{{cite web|title=Our History: 1955|url=http://www.croda.com/home.aspx?d=content&s=1&r=1175&p=8375|publisher=Croda International|access-date=11 September 2015|archive-date=22 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222000534/http://www.croda.com/home.aspx?d=content&s=1&r=1175&p=8375|url-status=dead}}

Listed buildings

File:Gateway to Cowick Hall (geograph 2275965).jpg

Cowick Hall is Grade I-listed with Historic England, and three other buildings on the estate are Grade II-listed:

  • The Bonomi-designed coachhouse and stable block, which lies approximately {{convert|150|m|ft}} east of the main house;{{NHLE|desc=Coach-house and stable range at Cowick Hall|num=1083324|access-date=9 September 2015}}
  • the dower house, approximately {{convert|100|m|ft}} northeast of Cowick Hall;{{NHLE|desc=Dower House, Cowick Hall|num=1346684|access-date=9 September 2015}} and
  • the gate lodge, most likely designed by Paine during his work in the mid-18th century.{{NHLE|desc=Gate Lodge Cowick Hall|num=1346685|access-date=9 September 2015}}

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See also

{{Commons category|Cowick Hall}}

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References