Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Hartwell House

Hartwell House in Buckinghamshire is a very fine 17th century mansion, now owned on long lease by the National Trust and operated as a Historic House Hotel.  The architectural history of the house is complex, with many early 17th century features surviving, as well as a building phase dating to the 1760s. The landscape was associated with Richard Woods, a follower of Lancelot Brown. Significant restoration took place after a fire in 1963. 
Hartwell House

The social history of the building is equally complex. A family connection with the site can be traced to the Norman conquest. In Elizabethan times it was the family home of the Hampdens, and later the Lees (ancestors of General Robert E Lee). The exiled Louis VIII of France stayed there with his court during the revolutionary years of 1809 to 1814, in which time “the roof was converted into a miniature farm, where birds and rabbits were reared in cages, while vegetables and herbs were cultivated in densely planted tubs.” Later, the temperance campaigner and scientific champion Dr John Lee turned the house into “a cross between a temperance hall, a museum and an astronomical observatory”, before being threatened by a local Luddite uprising. Typically, it was requisitioned by the army during the Second World War, and later became a girls’ finishing school. It was reopened as a hotel in 1989, and given to the National Trust in 2008. (All quotes are from a fascinating account of the history of the house, available here.)
The avenue at Hartwell, looking from the house at the life-size equestrian statue of Frederick Prince of Wales  and beyond. The HS2 route lies at the very bottom of the avenue.

Hartwell is currently in the public eye because the projected High Speed 2 rail line will cut across the north-east edge of the park, running across what is currently a golf course between the park and the edge of Aylesbury. These pictures show the land that will be most affected by the route. As well as the visual intrusion, it is anticipated that there will be significant sound impacts, as trains run at 250 mph speed up and down the line as many as 17 times an hour. The National Trust’s statement on High Speed 2 can be seen here.  

The golf course adjacent to Hartwell, where the HS2 line will run


Sunday, 5 June 2011

“I come not from heaven but from Essex” (A Dream of John Ball)


I was present at a very special event this weekend – the Thaxted Centenary Ring Meeting. Yes, this is going to be a blog about Morris Dancing. But please don’t give up just yet.
Morris Men performing in Thaxted Town Street. Gustav Holst's house was the grey coloured building to the left in the background.


I admit to having mixed thoughts about Morris Dancing. But I am fascinated by the story of the Thaxted Morris, the origins of which are closely connected with Conrad Noel, the so-called ‘Red Vicar’ of Thaxted.  Dancing, song, folklore and music were integral to Noel’s Christian socialism, and it was Miriam, his wife, who established the Thaxted Morris and Folk Song Company in January 1911. What could seem to us now a sometimes cloyingly sentimental expression of tradition was, in its day, a radical gesture – an expression of spiritual joy and an attempt to create beauty in a country beset by poverty and oppression. Reg Groves’ 1967 book Conrad Noel and the Thaxted Movement has this to say about the earliest months of the Thaxted Morris:

“During those early months of the year 1911, the pulse of Thaxted was beating perceptibly faster. Many who were opposed to Noel’s ideas, found themselves carried along in the surge of activity and excitement; and many who might have hesitated and stood aside were moved by the enthusiasm of the young people and children to lend Noel their support. It was as though Thaxted was awakening from a long sleep, renewed and refreshed – and young again” (p.74)

“As the  Morris teams moved in the ancient and lovely patterns … they were recreating the vision of a green and pleasant England freed from grime, and poverty, and exploitation, the vision that had haunted England’s poets and dreamers and rebels down the centuries.” (p.90)

I tried to keep this in mind as I watched the proceedings unfold in Thaxted’s main public space, the Town Street in front of the Guildhall. The Thaxted Morris today is exclusively male (according to the brochure this was on the insistence of Conrad Noel himself, though in fact Miriam Noel’s earliest Morris teams were mixed). There’s a certain charm in the variety of dances and Morris sides – each with different costumes, colours, and methods of dancing – some with sticks, many with bells. But somewhere along the line the radical origins of the festival have been sidelined – instead, the festival is purely a celebration of ‘tradition’, in all its tankard-swilling glory.

However, the final dance of the day yesterday was well worth waiting for. A version of the Abbots Bromley Horn Dance has been performed by the Thaxted Morris since 1926 - it became the finale to the Ring meeting from 1947. It is a weird, moving spectacle, involving the most senior of the Morris Men carrying carved deer heads and antlers, one man dressed as an old maid in black and with a parasol, a ‘Robin Hood’ figure carrying a bow and arrow, and a musician playing the haunting cyclical tune on a fiddle, accompanied by a boy playing the triangle. The dance begins and ends at Thaxted church – symbolising the theological origins of the Thaxted Morris. Steve Roud notes the dance has been interpreted as a fertility rite, or a ceremony to ensure successful hunting, or an assertion of common rights over the chase, but also that none of these claims has been substantiated. Instead the principal distinguishing feature of the dance is how different it is from those performed by the energetic Morris sides during the rest of the festival. The Abbots Bromley dance is sedate, measured, careful in its choreography, involving the hypnotic interweaving of the dancers as they criss cross one another, occasionally tilting their horns just so. One reporter in The Times in 1936 reported how:

“The whole thing is done unassumedly and with a quiet purposefulness which is the keynote of the whole proceedings. One feels they are not dancing for joy or self-expression, but going quietly about a task which must be accomplished without unnecessary fuss”. (Roud, p.395)

Last night’s performance was certainly in this tradition. The eerie quiet that descended on the crowd as the lights were dimmed and the procession from the church began was broken only by the sound of an exceptionally loud mobile phone ringtone going off. Its owner looked rather sheepish – as if he had broken a 100-year old spell that was being cast over this forgotten corner of Essex.