Wednesday 24 August 2016

Visit to Apethorpe Palace

Today is Margaret's 63rd birthday and we spent it by taking a trip to Apethorpe Hall, followed by lunch at the Cross Keys in King's Cliffe.
Apethorpe Hall is an interesting place - it's probably the best-preserved Jacobean palace in the country, but was almost lost due to neglect.
It was built as a hunting lodge on the Rockingham Forest estate and came into the ownership of Henry VIII, who passed it on to Elizabeth I. She has her eye on an estate in Gloucestershire and so suggested a swap with the owner of that place.
When the queen suggests she'd like to swap, you don't say "no thank you" and so the deal was done. Queen Elizabeth stayed there a couple of times (in 1562 and 1566) and her successor James I was a regular visitor and even financed some extensions and improvements to the place.
After 300 years of ownership by various Earls of Westmorland, the family hit hard times and sold to Lord Brassey in 1904. They lived there until just after the Second World War when it was sold to the Catholic Church as a correction centre for boys. It was sold in the 1970s to a Libyan businessman, but political problems with Libya and the Gaddafi regime meant he could not take up residence and so it remained neglected with a caretaker - George Kelly - staying on unpaid and doing what he could to keep the place intact.

He made numerous representations to the government and English Heritage and, in 2004, it was compulsorily purchased by the government and given to English Heritage. They spent millions making the place watertight and restoring various plasterworks and then sold it to Jean Christophe Iseux, Baron von Pfetten who is a French academic and diplomat who has served as senior advisor to the Chinese government and also advised Iran on its nuclear power programme.
He acquired Apethorpe Hall in 2014 and promptly renamed it Apethorpe Palace. We say Ape-thorpe, but the upper crust call it App-thorpe apparently.
Anyway, he's now in residence at one end of the building (when he's not in one of his French chateaux) while renovations continue. He had to agree various covenants when buying the place, one of which was to open it to the public 35 days a year. He's actually exceeding that requirement by opening it for 50 days, so good for him!
You can't turn up and look round; all visits are guided by English Heritage staff and have to be pre-booked. We went with my Probus Club.
I've been through Apethorpe a few times, but had no idea this place was there. Apart from the Baron's living quarters, which you don't get to see, the building is pretty much a shell, with no plumbing, no heating and no electricity. English Heritage have fixed the roofs, made it weatherproof and also stabilised and made safe a number of ornate plaster ceilings from the Jacobean period.

They are elaborate, beautifully preserved/restored and it's interesting to walk through a place that has no furniture. It feels old in a sense that other old buildings, which are furnished, lived in and have all "mod cons" don't. I guess it was wonderfully atmospheric and because of the absence of modern fittings, it felt more in touch with its past.
Very old avenue of yew trees in the gardens.

Monday 22 August 2016

Julia's first pair of shoes

Getting your first pair of shoes is one of life’s little milestones – first tooth, first haircut, first steps.
Today, Margaret, Lucy and I took Julia to Clarks shoe shop in Queensgate to have her feet measured and to buy her first shoes.
Julia isn’t walking yet, but she will push a walker (doggy) along and I’m sure it will only be a few weeks before she is toddling.
Tom had a very busy few days – a trip to Manchester, a trip to Leicester and then an early start to film at a fruit farm in Suffolk. Julia and Lucy came to stay with us and Julia was in a very happy mood – no tears in the car, swinging her leg over the side of the buggy (just like her dad used to) and jabbering away.
She liked the look of Queensgate (the shopping centre) and the Clarks shop was a new experience. They were very kind and helpful. We’d made an appointment to have her feet measured and it was just as well because the shop was full of children getting new shoes for the start of the autumn school term.
I can remember having my feet measured when I was little and also taking my own children along. Now I’m taking my grandchildren – Clarks has done rather well out of me over the years!
It’s a little more high-tech these days: assistants carry little portable devices and tablets, but the result is still the same - 4G in Julia’s case.
She found the whole process very interesting; the shop was fascinating (she’d have loved to re-arrange the shoes on the display shelves) and didn’t at all mind trying on shoes. Lucy chose a nice dark pink pair and Julia seemed very proud to wear them.
Afterwards, we went to the John Lewis cafe for lunch and Julia shared my salmon sandwich and some of Margaret and Lucy’s sausage, mash and gravy – a strange combination, but one that went down very well.