Lydiard House is located in Lydiard Park, Swindon. The Palladian style house with Georgian features and land was owned by the Vicount Bolingbroke for several centuries until the costs of upkeep became too high. It is now owned by Swindon Borough Council who renovated it and opened it as a public museum with the surrounding park open as a public park.
Library
Dining Room
Table setting arrangement
Dummy cut out, these were commonly included in living spaces to give the illusion of there being people in the house at all times, to deter burglers and give a full house appearance
Sideboard in the dining room with display bowls
Drawing Room portraits and photographs
Tea was drunk in the Drawing room, tea cups and tea pot
Afternoon tea in the drawing room was a practice that was popularised in the early 19th century by the Duchess of Bedford who, in need of an afternoon 'pick me up' , began to take a pot of tea and a light snack in her private rooms at Woburn Abbey. She began to invite guests to join her and the practice spread amongst her aristocratic friends and it soon became a fashionable social occasion.
Bed chamber
close up of the bed covered with embroidered designs
secret doorway
Chandelier
Stained glass window
The Socchi Desk
The Socchi desk is one of five desks and the only one in the UK. It is a mechanical table that can close into a circle shape. It was made by Italian cabinet market Giovanni Socchi in 1830.
Lady Beauclerk, formerly Viscountess Bolingbroke (née Spencer) 1734-1808 was the daughter of the 3rd Duke of Marlborough, she married Viscount Bolingbroke and had two sons and a daughter.
She got divorced and remarried and was a talented artist.
The Walled Garden was remodelled in the 1740s as a formal enclosed garden
Walled garden
Walled garden view
Walled garden view
The garden changes with the seasons
Outside in the grounds away from the front of the house can be found the ice house.
Ice house used to refridgerate food for the house
There is a lot to explore in the house and the park
Find out more about Lydiard house, gardens grounds and the church on the grounds here
http://www.lydiardpark.org.uk/Pages/Home.aspx
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