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Over the last 900 years there have been two owners of the
Bucklebury Estate; Reading Abbey and the Winchcombe Family.
King Henry I granted the Bucklebury Estate to the Benedictine
Monks of Reading Abbey in 1121. The Abbot of Reading Abbey
built a house at Bucklebury (on the current site of Bucklebury
House) and constructed an elaborate series of fishponds, a
dovecote, created a feudal field system and a Warren for rabbits.
The Abbot and Community of Reading Abbey oversaw the affairs
of the Bucklebury Estate until 1538 when the Estate was confiscated
by the Crown under the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The
last Abbot of Reading, Hugh Faringdon was martyred for his
faith.
In 1540 John Winchcombe, the son of the wealthy woollen merchant,
Jack O’Newbury, acquired the parishes of Bucklebury
and Thatcham from the Crown for £2,619.13s. 4d. John
Winchcombe demolished the Abbot’s house and built an
impressive Tudor Mansion in its place. The Winchcombe Family
also acquired estates at East Lockinge and East Shefford.
The Winchombes remained at Bucklebury until the early 18th
century. The Winchcombes represented Berkshire in Parliament
and married into the Howard Family (Earls of Berkshire). The
Winchcombes ran out of male heirs and the Estate passed to
Lady Frances Winchcombe who married Henry
St.John, Lord Bolingbroke, Secretary of State to Queen
Anne. Lord and Lady Bolingbroke rebuilt the kitchens and stables
at Bucklebury House. During this period Dean Swift, John Gay,
Robert Harley and John Arbuthnot visited Bucklebury.
Lady Bolingbrooke’s sister, Mary Winchcombe inherited
the Bucklebury and Thatcham Estates (but later forfeited Thatcham
due to her Brother-in-law’s attainder). However, she
married Robert Packer and extended the family Estates to include
the Chipping Sodbury, Old Sodbury and Little Sodbury Estates
in Gloucestershire and the Donnington Castle Estate in Berkshire.
It was in 1632 that the family took on the patronage of Donnington
Hospital with extensive lands in Oxford including the Manor
of Iffley and land in Cowley, Littlemore and the City.
The Packer line ran out in 1746 and the Estates were inherited
by a nephew, Winchcombe Henry Hartley. He was the son of David
Hartley, the philosopher and author of “Observations
on man, his frame, his duty and his expectations”.
His half brother, David Hartley, was MP for Kingston upon
Hull, and an early advocate (before Wilberforce) of the abolition
of the Slave Trade. Hartley was a great friend of Benjamin
Franklin and proponent of the Independence of the United States
of America. In September 1783 he was dispatched by the Prime
Minister, Lord North, to Paris to sign the Treaty of Paris
with Benjamin Franklin and Adams (second President of the
United States).
The Hartleys continued to manage their Gloucester and Berkshire
Estates for another 140 years until 1881 when Winchcombe Henry
Howard Hartley died. Bucklebury House had burnt down in 1832
and the family moved to Lyegrove, the principal seat of their
Sodbury Estates, some 12 miles north of Bath. Winchcombe Hartley
had no children and therefore the Estates were divided between
four nieces, the children of his sister Elizabeth Hartley
and the Count Demetrius of Corfu. Count Demetrius de Palatiano
lived between Corfu, Naples and Paris where he was painted
by Delacroix, Corbet and Bonnington. The four sisters decided
to sell the Gloucestershire Estate in 1906 and the youngest;
Frances married Charles Russell of King’s Castle, Ardglass,
Co Down. Their third son, Henry Russell added his maternal
grandfather’s surname to become Henry Hartley Russell.
Henry Hartley Russell died in 1959 and he was succeeded by
his only son, Derek Hartley Russell. Pam and Derek Hartley
Russell moved to Bucklebury House in 1957 and began the task
of restoring Bucklebury House for he first time since it was
largely destroyed in the fire of 1832. Derek Hartley Russell
was Chairman of Berkshire County Council (1967-1970) and High
Sheriff of Berkshire (1973-1974). He died in 1991, when his
son Willie Hartley Russell MVO inherited the Bucklebury Estate.
Willie is also Chairman of the family’s Charitable Trust,
The Donnington Hospital Trust.
Willie and Marina live at Bucklebury House, they have 5 sons
between them.
More details about the history of the The
Bucklebury Estate can be found on the Berkshire History
website under 'castles'.
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