North Yorkshire County Record Office & Newburgh Priory
Description
The private residence of Newburgh Priory is a Grade I listed building, which dates back to the 16th century. With origins as an Augustinian Priory founded in 1145, following the dissolution under King Henry VIII, it was acquired by Anthony Bellasis and remained within the family, who became Earls of Fauconberg, until it passed to the Wombwells through the female line in 1825.
Newburgh Priory lies 8 miles to the south-east of Thirsk, just outside the village of Coxwold at the western edge of the North York Moors National Park in North Yorkshire. The garden, pleasure grounds and park around the Priory are designated at Grade II on the Historic England Register of Historic Parks and Gardens. They were laid out c.1730/40 for the 4th Viscount Fauconberg and subsequently modified in the later 18th- and 19th-centuries. Much of the area of formal gardens no longer survives, but there is still plenty to see: topiary, lakes, historic trees, a water garden and walled garden.
A fine series of historic estate plans survive in the Fauconberg (Belasyse) of Newburgh Priory archive held at the North Yorkshire County Record Office (NYCRO) in Northallerton. This collection includes plans dated 1605, 1722 and 1744, which show aspects of the historic designed landscape and its development.
View of south front of Newburgh Priory by G. Falkingham
Booking info
For an illustrated report please see Yorkshire Gardens Trust Newsletter 53, Autumn 2023, p14
https://www.yorkshiregardenstrust.org.uk/sites/yorkshiregardenstrust.or…