Upton House is a country house in the civil parish of Ratley and Upton, in the English county of Warwickshire, about 7 miles (11 km) northwest of Banbury, Oxfordshire. It is in the care of the National Trust.
The house was built on the site of the hamlet of Upton, which was destroyed in about 1500 when the land was cleared for pasture.
The estate passed through various hands until the early 16th century
when it was bought by Sir William Danvers. It remained with the Danvers
family until 1688 when Sir Rushout Cullen purchased the estate for £7,000 (equivalent to £1,140,000 in 2015). Cullen built the house for himself in about 1695.
In 1757 the house was bought by banker Francis Child for use as a
hunting lodge and it remained in the Jersey family until the end of the
19th century when it was held by George Child Villiers, 5th Earl of Jersey. In 1927 the estate was acquired by Walter Samuel, 2nd Viscount Bearsted, who owed his fortune to the fact that his father Marcus Samuel was the founder of the oil company Shell Transport & Trading. Lord Bearsted donated the house, gardens and art collection to the National Trust in 1948.
Lord Bearsted's son, the 3rd Viscount, lived at Upton from 1948 until
his death in 1986 and added to the gift to the National Trust the
collection of fine porcelain. On the death of the 3rd Viscount, the
furniture and other items on view in the rooms were offered to the
nation by his daughter, Hon. Mrs. R. Waley-Cohen, through the "in lieu"
system, on condition that they remain at Upton and on view to the
public.
Mrs. Waley-Cohen continued to live in the house until 1988, when the
family moved to another property on the estate. In October 1991, she
offered for sale by public auction, a large number of items which were considered surplus to requirements. The sale at the house by Christie's, in a total of 1083 separate lots, included pictures, furniture, porcelain, silver, objects and carpets.
The collection at Upton includes English and Continental old masters: Tiepolo, Anthony Devis, Francesco Guardi, Jan Steen, Melchior de Hondecoeter, Thomas Gainsborough, Joshua Reynolds, Tintoretto and Rogier van der Weyden.
The garden. A lawn, with huge cedar trees, sweeps gently down from the house and below is an extensive terraced garden. The garden features a kitchen garden, a series of herbaceous borders and a large lake with water lilies in a small valley. The terracing, unseen from the house and on a first visit unsuspected, contains the National Collection of Aster. In use since the 12th century, the gardens were largely transformed by Kitty Lloyd-Jones for Lady Bearsted in the 1920s and 1930s, including the creation of a rare Bog Garden on the site of medieval fish ponds
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