Kingsheadwye

Grade I Heritage Walk: Walking to Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways from The King’s Head — 2.6-Mile Circular via Godmersham

Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways — a Grade I listed building 2.6 miles from The King's Head, Wye.

straighten2.6 miles timer105 min round trip
Kent Downs landscape above Wye

Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways is a red brick in Godmersham, 2.6 miles from The King’s Head. Historic England listed it in 1952.

Walking to Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways — 2.6 miles from Wye

straighten

Distance
2.6 miles

timer

Duration
1 hr 45 min

terrain

Terrain
River-side footpath and meadow

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Elevation
40m ascent

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Difficulty
Moderate

Start & finish: The King’s Head, Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA

Elevation profile
0 mi 1.3 mi 2.6 mi Peak ~40m
Surface: River-side footpath and meadow
Landscape zone: The Stour Valley Floor

Rated Moderate at 2.6 miles with about 40m of ascent. Allow around 105 minutes at a steady 3 mph pace; add 15–20 minutes for photographs at the building and a pause at a viewpoint.

Why Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways is Grade I listed — the 1952 designation

The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

Grade:
I
Listed:
1952
Parish:
Godmersham
District:
Ashford
Statutory address:
Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways
NHLE entry:
1071232 ↗

TR 05 SE GODMERSHAM GODMERSHAM PARK 4/24 Godmersham Park, Courtyards, walled 13.10.52 gardens and gateways I House. 1732 for Thomas Brodnax-May-Knight, wings added c. 1780, south front remodelled 1852, and c. 1935 by Walter Sarel. Red brick and ashlar dressings and slate roof. North front: painted in C19, the bricks were turned round to expose unpainted surface c. 1935. 2 storeys and attic on ashlar plinth, with discontinuous plat band, modillion eaves cornice, parapet bearing urns, and hipped roof, with 2 projecting hipped wings, 5 pedimented dormers, and 4 stacks regularly ranged left to right. Regular fenestra- tion in 2-3-2 rhythm, all windows C20 glazing bar sashes. Recessed hall of 3 windows, square sashes to first floor, keyed oeil-de- boeuf mezzainine windows and 2 sash windows with cornice hoods on consoles on ground floor,flanking central double doors of 3 fielded panels each, with semi-circular fanlight and moulded arched surrounds. Attached Ionic columns support pediment above. Two projecting wings beyond of 2 windows, those on ground floor with pediments over. Flanking this main block are corridor wings, stepped down and recessed, of 1 window to each floor, that on ground floor with “Gibbs surround”. Beyond, low wings of 2 storeys on plinth with plat band and hipped roof with 5 windows and gauged heads to each floor. South front: originally plainer than north front, with bayed ends to projecting wings attic and pedimented portico, now of 2 storeys and garret and 4 stacks with ashlar plinth, plat band, cornice and balustraded parapet. Main block of recessed centre and projecting wings, 7 windows to each floor, the central recessed area (the Saloon) with French windows flanking blocked doorway with broken pediment enclosing cartouche supported on Ionic pilasters. The entrance is now by French doors in the left hand corridor wing. The wing to left now an orangery with 3 full height glazing-bar arched and keyed windows flanked by Doric pilasters. The wing to right has similar plinth, plat band, cornice and parapet with urns, but has 5 glazing bar sash windows to each floor. This front is as rebuilt c 1935. Interior: 2 original interiors of c. 1732 survive; the entrance hall, of 1 storey only the mezzanine oeil-de-boeuf windows echoed by medallions in the deep frieze, a fire place with pedimented plaster relief over to right faced to left by pedimented niche with shell-head alcove. Rectangular compartmented ceilings, the beams with stucco fruit and flowers. The other original interior is the drawing room with, plaster work of musical instruments, fruit and flowers, and framed mirrors, all after the style of William Kent. (C. Hussey, C.L. Feb. 23. 1945, 334). All other interiors by Walter Sarel c. 1935, using many genuine C18 features brought in from various other places. (Sevenoaks, London, Bath). The orangery decorated by Felix Harbord. Subsidiary features: post and iron chain attached to obelisks before main north door. Brick wall running left off north front, 7′ high, stepped down at 3 stages, and terminating in gateway, with vermiculated and rusticated piers, supporting plinths bearing coade stone urns, signed Coade, London 1793. 2 similar urns at entrance to stable courtyard beyond, and to right, large keyed arched gateway with pediment over to kitchen courtyard. Stable ranges (now offices in part) C18 with C20 additions, of 1 storey red brick, plain tile roof, irregular fenestration. West,the walled gardens, 3 in all, with C17 and C18 walls in English and Flemish (chequered) bonds, an average 10′ high, with round-arched doors, extending in 3 court- yards c. 150 yards north-south and c. 30 yards east-west, the most southerly a Yew tree garden laid out by Norah Lindsay. The south front and west court fronted with raised stone flag pavement, the west court with lily pond, with wall-water spout, balustraded courtyard, and flights of steps, with full size statue of a stag, and large urn in niche on side of house. Statuary otherwised itemised separately. History: the house was owned from 1797 – 1852 by Edward Austen – Knight, brother of Jane Austen, a frequent and regular visitor, supposed to have written some of her works here, and to have used Godmersham and its denizens as prototype for Mansfield Park. See. C. Hussey, C.L. Feb 16. 1945, 288-91, Feb. 23. 1945, 332-5, Mar. 2. 1945, 376-9. B.O.E. Kent II, 333. Listing NGR: TR0615251016

Listing metadata — from the National Heritage List for England
NHLE entry number:
1071232
Heritage Category / Grade:
Listed Building, Grade I
First listed:
1952
Capture scale:
1:2500
Grid reference (NGR):
TR 06154 51018
BNG Easting / Northing:
606,154 E / 151,018 N
Coordinates (WGS84):
51.221121°N, 0.950838°E
Parish:
Godmersham
District:
Ashford
Kent Downs landscape zone:
The Stour Valley Floor
Distance to North Downs Way:
2.39 miles
Distance from The King's Head:
2.62 miles
Walk duration (round trip):
105 minutes
Elevation gain:
40 m
Difficulty rating:
Moderate

Architectural features at Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways

Keywords extracted from Historic England’s Official List Entry — each one is genuinely in the designation prose, not inferred.

Material
red brickbrickslatestoneashlarstucco

Buildings listed in the 1950s near Wye

The landscape around Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways — The Stour Valley Floor

The Great Stour winds east through a broad, flat-bottomed valley of alluvium and river terrace gravels. Meadows close to the river are traditionally managed as damp grazing; in summer the banks are hung with willow and the still pools hold mayfly and brown trout. Historic watermills and gauged river stretches survive along the reach — material reminders of the valley’s medieval milling economy. The valley edges rise sharply into the flanking downs on both sides: looking east from Wye, one is reading a landscape section in real time, from chalk-grassland rim to river-meadow floor and up again.

Pubs within 3 miles of Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways

Pub Distance from route Address Postcode Authority
The Compasses open_in_new 2.0 miles Sole Street, Crundale, CT4 7ES CT4 7ES Canterbury
The King's Head open_in_new 2.6 miles Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA TN25 5EA Ashford
The Tickled Trout open_in_new 2.7 miles Upper Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA TN25 5EA Ashford

Plan your visit

Every walk on this site starts and finishes at The King’s Head — Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA.

Reserve a Table

Frequently asked about Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways

How far is Godmersham Park, Courtyards, Walled Gardens And Gateways from The King's Head?
2.6 miles one-way, roughly 2.6 miles round-trip. Expect about 105 minutes on foot at a steady pace.

Heritage data © Historic England NHLE · Trail & landscape data © Natural England (Open Government Licence) · Pub locations published under the Open Government Licence.