I’ve now been in my job as Regional Director for the
National Trust in the East of England for a full year. For me, it’s been a
rather wonderful year, getting to know the places and people that make the East
such a special region. But I regret to say that there are still some Trust places
in the East that I’ve yet to visit.
Ramsey Abbey Gatehouse - the pillar next to the road is all that survives of the original arch. |
I helped to correct that in part today by visiting two of
our smallest places (in terms of size), located at the most westerly edge of
the region. They also happen to be particularly special
places in their own right.
Ailwyn. Or not Ailwyn. |
Ramsey Abbey Gatehouse is part of a medieval monastic
complex that was once the fourth largest in the country. What’s left of the
monastic building is now a manor house that has been adapted as a school. The Trust's ownership extends to the Gatehouse only, gifted to the Trust by the brother of Lord Fairhaven
in 1952 in memory of his wife, a descendent of the barons de Ramsey.
The property is open on the first Sunday of the month only,
and is entirely run by volunteer support. Yet here, at Ramsey, some of the
finest medieval minds were at work. Documentation scattered across archives all
over the world show that medieval scholars were hard at work here, drawing some
of the earliest maps, preparing complicated calculus, and making depictions of
the night sky.
Ramsey Abbey Gatehouse - interior |
The Dissolution meant that Ramsey Abbey was broken up, and its
buildings mined for building materials (partly the reason why the village of Ramsey looks so picturesque today). The
small scale of the property belies, therefore, a much more significant past.
My next stop was Willington Dovecote and stables. As well as boasting a
fine, distinctive sixteenth-century dovecote, possibly built for a visit by
Henry VIII, Willington has a very special place in the history of the National
Trust in the East of England. It was the very first building to be acquired in
the region by the National Trust, in 1914, following a successful campaign by Miss
Orlebar, daughter of the local vicar, who bought it to save it from demolition.
The stables opposite the dovecote offer yet further
intrigue. A fine fireplace in the upstairs room suggests that this was more
than just a place to stable horses or cattle. A graffito on the fireplace even
suggests John Bunyan paid a visit from nearby Bedford (I wonder how accurate that is, mind…).
So much at Willington has been lost. There would formerly
have been a range of buildings here, part of a substantial landed estate. It’s much like
Ramsey Abbey, in other words. It is today the shadow of something that would, in its time,
have been of national significance, a haunt of kings and lords. You don’t have to look far in the East of England to uncover
intriguing stories like this. It’s why all of us who work or volunteer for the
Trust in the East count ourselves as being so very lucky.
How lucky to have been there!
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