A history of Bifrons mansion house
A HISTORY OF BIFRONS MANSION HOUSE
B.M. THOMAS
1. INTRODUCTION
A report on the excavation of the foundations of the vanished
mansion house of Bifrons in Patrixbourne has recently appeared in
this Journal.1
This compilation started as a brief history of the house and its
re-building and alteration over the past 400 years or so, written to
accompany the work done to uncover the foundations, which was
added to as further information came to light in the course of other
work.
2. THE BARGRAVE FAMILY
The first house on the site of Bifrons of which we have any evidence is
said to have been built by a John Bargrave according to Hasted. 2
Hasted says that the family were resident in the nearby village of
Bridge, and John was the eldest son of Robert Bargrave who died in
1600.
There is some documentary and other evidence concerning the
Bargrave family- alternatively known as Bargar- but it is insufficient
to explain how they came by the wealth to build a house of such
generous proportions as Bifrons; though it was by no means a palace.
Certainly one member of the family, Isaac, the brother of the John
who is reputed to have built Bifrons, achieved some note in history by
becoming Dean of Canterbury Cathedral but the father, Robert, who
was buried in the chancel of Bridge church, was a tanner by trade and
described as a yeoman.
1 R. Cross and T. Allen, 'Bifrons', Arch. Cant., cvii (1989), 327-32.
2 E. Hasted, History of the County of Kent, 2nd Edition, ix, 277.
313
l.,l
.....
,-
The south view: Showing the south of the house stripped of its formal garden.
PLATE I
0,
s:
i
0
s:
►
en
BIFRONS MANSION HOUSE
John Bargrave is known from his will3 to have died around 1624
leaving a widow Jane and a son Robert. Jane was the daughter and
co-heir of Giles Crouch of London, and it has been suggested that it
was through this marriage which took place in 1597 that John
acquired the money to build Bifrons. Blake4 presents a good
argument for the building to have taken place between 1607 and
1611. The fact that the family moved away from Patrixbourne for
four years - a typical construction time for such a building when lime
mortar was used - and then returned, indicates that there was
perhaps a previous house on the site which they had to vacate for its
demolition.
The house passed out of the Bargrave family when John's grandson
who was also named John sold it to Sir Arthur Slingsby in 16625 and it
then had four other owners before being bought by John Taylor in
1694.
3. THE BARGRA VE HOUSE
All that is known of the architecture of the house John Bargrave built
at Patrixbourne is given in two painted views now in the possession of
a descendant of the Taylor family, one of which is shown in Plate I,
and a landscape view looking down on the garden at the rear of the
house from the hill beyond, owned by the Yale Center for British Art
and dated by them as painted around 1705 or 1710, some century
after the house was built.
Architecture of the reign of James I, who came to the throne in
1603, was a transitional style of the early English renaissance known
as Jacobean. Many large houses of this period are left for us to enjoy:
among them Hatfield House, Hertfordshire; Blickling Hill, Norfolk;
Charlton House, Greenwich; Aston Hall, Birmingham, and nearby
Chilham Castle in Kent. Most of them have features of layout,
elevation and ornament in common. Typical of the external features
are the cupola-topped square towers, gable ends to the roof and
porches of a recognisable though debased renaissance form. Most of
them in the south of England were built of brick with stone quoins,
string-courses and window frames. The windows themselves were
usually large with stone mullions and transoms and were glazed with
leaded lights; large sheets of glass not then being readily available.
3 L.L. Duncan, 'Kentish Administrations', Arch. Cant., xx (1897), 15.
4 P.H. Blake, 'The Builder of Bifrons', Arch. Cant., cviii (1990), 270.
5 C. Greenwood, Epitome of County History, Vol. 1, Kent.
315
B.M. THOMAS
The windows were often set in bays; square, rounded or canted. Flat
roofs were seldom used and the hipped end was unknown.
Though we can place the building of Bargrave's house within
reasonably close dates, any further information has to be deduced
from the early paintings mentioned above.
The Landscape painting encompasses a wide sweep of the countryside
in which the house and garden are seen as a small part.
Nevertheless, the detail shown is informative. A typical Jacobean
house stands facing roughly northwards with its garden at the rear
enclosed by brick walls and containing formal beds and planting,
much statuary and a gazebo: in fact, a typical early Jacobean garden
developed from the medieval pattern with little concession to natural
form. There are gates in the wall at the end of the garden, which open
on to an avenue of trees in a meadow running down to a river. It is in
many ways surprising that a garden of this design should have
survived to the beginning of the eighteenth century. About the same
time, John Harris, a historian of Kent, recorded his impressions of
the garden at Bifrons.6 He mentions the view down the garden to the
'Canal', which had two islands at one end of it and a bathing house
with 'Beds and Rooms for Company'. He also mentions the garden
walls, covered with 'striped' holly growing from one side and trained
over the top and down the other side to the ground and he comments
favourably on the 'Turff' of the green walks.
The house is shown in the Landscape as built of brick with stone
detail and with two wings to the south which, differing in style,
appear to be additions.
The other painting of importance for this period (the view from the
south shown in Plate I) seems to depict the house at a later date than
the Landscape since the formal garden has disappeared. In the course
of the seventeenth century the garden lost much of its rigidity and
more plants became available which were employed in a more natural
fashion. The final stage of this gradual movement was the landscape
school of park and garden which began in the early years of the
eighteenth century and culminated in the wholesale destruction of a
large number of formal gardens under the influence of such as
Capability Brown. The formal garden shown in the Landscape is
absent in Plate I, so the second must represent a later state. Since not
even the garden walls are shown, it cannot be the result of neglect.
Capability Brown started his work around 1750 and only gradually
became popular. It seems possible, therefore, that the clearance of
the formal garden may have been carried out at around the time the
6 J. Harris, History of Kent, (1719), 233.
316
BIFRONS MANSION HOUSE
house was bought by Rev. Edward Taylor at the end of the
eighteenth century.
Another reason for Plate I being later than the Landscape view is
the apparent disappearance of the bay window on the west side of the
house. From the beginning of the eighteenth century the development
of Georgian architecture exhibited a dislike of bay windows and
a preference for flat fac;:ades. This was an English interpretation of a
feature of the renaissance style. The bay window shown in the
Landscape on the west side is no longer to be seen in Plate I, having
been replaced by two flush windows probably to accord with this later
trend.
The additions can be seen clearly in Plate I. They have plain gables
compared to those on the house to which they connect and smaller
windows, moreover they seem to be on a less grandiose scale with
lower ceiling heights. There is little evidence on which to date them.
They are similar in proportion, but differ in detail and would seem to
have been built some years apart in different styles and do not have
the symmetry both in elevation and in detail of earlier Jacobean
architecture. The south-west wing seems to have an open loggia or
cloister on the ground floor. The south-east wing has 6 small windows
on the first floor and 9 on the ground floor and certainly looks to be
more Georgian in period. Neither view shows a door on the south
side.
Plate I also shows an added block, which can be seen though less
distinctly in the Landscape view, between the north-west wing and its
southern extension. This has windows at mid-floor height as if it
contains a staircase and raises interesting questions about the internal
arrangements of the house as originally built.
There is another painting in the same style as Plate I showing the
front of the house looking much as would be expected of an early
Jacobean house. Walls and railings enclose a courtyard, indicating
that the formal garden might still exist behind the house. If this is so
then this painting must be earlier than Plate I.
If the assumptions about the additions are correct, then the original
house was U-shaped. From what can be seen in the painting of its
front elevation, Bifrons has some possible precursors for example
Wimbledon House to which it bears a striking resemblance. This
house was built by Thomas Cecil in 1588 (and demolished in 1720)
and there is a plan among Thorpe's drawings and an elevation by
H. Winstanley. This house is shown with an entrance front with a
central porch, square towers in the angles of the two wings containing
staircases with landings about 16 ft. sq. and canted bay windows. It
seems to have been much the same size as Bifrons.
Hatfield House (1611) though of greater size than Wimbledon has
317
B.M. THOMAS
also a U-plan with the original entrance on the south side in what is now
the courtyard. It possesses a remarkably fine great staircase which
feature is one of the principal inventions of Jacobean architecture.
The extent to which the building fashion set by the wealthy members
of the Court, such as the Cecils who built Hatfield, was echoed by the
gentry was governed by the gentry's contact with the Court. If this was
tenuous, the building fashion, particularly of the interior which is less
easily seen by those with little acquaintance with the owner, was likely to
be some years behind the times. Since as fariaslis known1John.Bargrave
had no contact with the Court, though he may have frequented London
through his connection with his wife's family, he may have been able to
copy the outside of a house such as Wimbledon but not having seen the
interior his layout would have been conservative. In the light of this
possibility the later addition of the great staircase without which the
house would surely be regarded as old-fashioned would suggest an early
date for the first building of the house.
Reverting to the painting of the entrance front, it seems likely from
the appearance of the fenestration, that the entrance porch led into
the Great Hall as it does at Chilham Castle and Hatfield House. This
Hall and its associated passages and gallery were of considerable size
and height: about 65 ft. (20 m.) long with a ceiling height of nearly
25 ft. (7.50 m.) to judge from the size of the staircase towers. This
again would favour an early date for the house for in the later years of
the period the Hall had declined in size to that of a vestibule.
The large building to the east of the house, to be seen both in the
Landscape and in Plate I was probably the stables; the windows on
the first floor, the only ones visible, lighting the accommodation for
the stable staff with the stables and carriage houses below.
The name given to the house - Bifrons - is probably derived from
the two Latin words bi-, meaning two, and frons, meaning face or
faade. This seems the equivalent to today's 'double-fronted' applied
by estate agents to detached houses which show some form of
symmetry about the entrance, though it is possible that it indicated a
similarity between the entrance and garden fronts. The symmetrical
elevations displayed by most houses influenced by renaissance ideas
in architecture, including John Bargrave's house, were indeed
'double-fronted'.
4. THE TAYLORS
John Taylor, who purchased Bifrons on 29th September, 1694 (the
date is given precisely on his memorial tablet in Patrixbourne
church), was born in 1665 the son of Nathaniel Taylor, a barrister
318
BIFRONS MANSION HOUSE
from Shropshire who had the dubious distinction of being 'elected by
letter' from Cromwell to represent the County of Bedford. 7
At the age of 19 John, who was said to have been a person of
somewhat morose temper, married Olivia, the daughter of Sir
Nicholas Tempest.8 Their eldest son Brook was born in 1685 and
later became a famous mathematician and discoverer of Taylor's
Theorem. Though Brook married twice both wives died in childbirth
and no male heir survived. Bifrons then passed first to Brook's
brother Herbert and in turn to Herbert's eldest son who died young
in 1767. The estate then passed to Herbert's second son the Rev.
Edward Taylor.
Edward Taylor was 33 when he inherited Bifrons and within a few
years he pulled down the old house and began to build again. Hasted
says that he rebuilt nearly on the old site and the recent excavation of
the foundations has uncovered Jacobean brickwork in the foundations
of the later house.
Taylor's reasons for this considerable expenditure can only be
guessed. Jacobean houses were inconvenient, being laid out on the
principle of one room leading out of another; thus, there was little
privacy as the rooms functioned also as passageways. The servants
were, therefore, unable to carry out their duties without invading the
privacy of the owner and his family. Inconvenience apart, the
Jacobean style was by this time considered old-fashioned. In those
days the concept of the heritage was barely recognised and a man was
admired for being up-to-date and not for keeping to the old ways. In
an age of great confidence and forward looking, a new house was the
symbol of the owners' wealth, taste and progressive views. The
Jacobean house was said to be Gothick, a term of disparagement.
Harris in 1719 describes the house as being 'built after the Gothick
manner'. 9
Many seventeenth-century houses had been adapted for the new
way of living by the addition of corridors and extra rooms in the
course of replanning the interior and by changing the external
appearance to suit the current architectural style. As has been shown,
there are indications that previous owners had removed some bay
windows and added a staircase quite apart from the addition of the
two wings. However, if one could afford it, a new house would
obviously be more convenient for the occupants and would excite
more admiration from one's acquaintances.
7 Kentish Register, June 1794, page 229.
8 Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th. Edition, vol. 26, 467.
9 Op. cit., 6.
319
B.M. THOMAS
5. TAYLOR'S NEW HOUSE
The new Bifrons as drawn by Oldfield for the Kentish Register
(Fig. 1) was a plain building in the classical style with little ornamental
embellishment. The cornice was probably dentillated and the
pediment over the front door was supported by simple columns. The
basement was not differentiated from the upper storeys in any way,
which was unusual for a house of its size and made it look rather tall
for its length. Edward Brayley in The Beauties of England and Wales
in 180610 speaks of ' ... the present mansion, a respectable brick
structure ...', but there seems to be no other contemporary description
of the house.
The stable block, which still exists, though it has been heavily
altered on more than one occasion, could be of the same period as the
house, but there is no firm evidence on which to base a date.
Rev. Edward Taylor died in 1798 leaving four sons each of whom
achieved some success in life.11 The eldest, also named Edward,
became Member of Parliament for Canterbury and it was he who
eventually sold Bifrons in 1830. The second son, Sir Brook Taylor,
became private secretary to Lord Grenville, the Whig Prime Minister
in 1806 and 1807, and a Privy Councillor. The third was private
secretary to Frederic, Duke of York, and then to George III. The
fourth son became a captain in the Royal Navy.
6. THE TA YLORS' LA TIER YEARS
In 1802, the younger Edward Taylor married Louisa, the only child of
Rev. Charles Beckingham of Bourne Park some two miles from
Bifrons.1 2 Louisa's father died in 1807 some four months after
Edward had been elected Member of Parliament for Canterbury
coming second in the poll, and, therefore, taking the second seat for
that City. It seems }§robable that Louisa inherited Bourne Park for
the land tax returns 3 show that the Taylors went to live there in 1824
and let Bifrons. Louisa's mother must at some stage have moved out
of Bourne Park for, when she died in 1844, she was living in Dover.
Bourne Park, whose architect was John Shaw the younger, 14 is a
10 E.W. Brayley, The Beauties of England and Wales, ii (1806).
11 Rev. W.A. Scott Robertson, 'Patricksbourne Church and Bifrons', Arch. Cant.,
xiv (1876), 173-6.
12 Kentish Gazette, September 7th, 1802.
13 Land Tax Returns, Kent County Archives.
14 Country Life, 6th-13th May, 1922.
320
VJ
N ......
, r 7 ., ,,,
BIEJUV\-.,, ,,/,,· , i:r// ,/ //t,e .Jr..'.,-x: r.DA'LJJtJ":':' ;t:11.JrLtJA,
_.,v,J/y'A:?J•.1!'L)'.fl../ lj .run,,,,t.Qn,,u--kJJ .(.f,.,,..,, Chu;,.
Fig. 1. The new Bifrons: An engraving in the Kentish Register of 1794 drawn by Oldfield.
to
-
"?1
';lj
0
z
rJl
>
z
rJl
0
z
:r:
0
C
rJl
m
B.M. THOMAS
larger house than was Taylor's Bifrons though of much the same
style. It has two storeys and was built of brick with stone trimmings
such as quoins and is set most elegantly in a wide valley overlooking a
lake where it stands today almost unaltered. Apart from its lovely
setting Bourne may well have had somewhat better arrangements
inside to persuade Edward Taylor to move out of the house his father
had built.
The first tenant of Bifrons in 1825 was the second Marquess of Ely
who occupied the house for two years.15 In 1828, Lady Byron became
the tenant. Lord Byron, from whom she had separated in 1815 after
only a year of marriage, had died in Greece in 1824 by which time the
family home at Newstead Abbey had already been sold to Col.
Wildman whose brother lived at Chilham Castle 10 miles away, for
the sum of £94,000.
In 1830, Edward Taylor sold Bifrons to the first Marquess Conyngham
and a new chapter opened in the life of the house.
7. THE PROBLEM OF THOMAS HUNT
A dictionary of architects16 states that Bifrons - meaning the house
that stood in the Conynghams' time - was the work of Thomas Hunt.
He was born in 1791 and from 1813 - at the age of 22 - he was
employed by the Office of Works at St. James's and Kensington
Palaces. He is said to have been an able architect who made a special
study of the Tudor style but, unhappily, suffered from a tendency to
run into debt and so spent some of his time hiding from the bailiffs.
He died on 4th January, 1831, at the young age of 40 and his obituary
appeared in the Gentleman's Magazine of that year.17
Hunt was probably best known for his books of which he wrote
four, all concerned with the design of cottages and houses in a style
derived from his studies of Tudor architecture of which he had
experience from the Tudor palaces in his charge.
The only evidence for an association of Thomas Hunt with Bifrons
occurs in remarks made by William Jerdan in his four volume
autobiography . 18 Jerdan founded and edited the Literary Gazette of
that time and was an acquaintance of Hunt who contributed to the
Gazette. Jerdan says that Hunt trained in the office of Sir John Soane
15 Voters' Lists, Kent County Archives.
16 H.M. Colvin, Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840, London
(1978).
17 Gentleman's Magazine, April 1831, 376.
18 W. Jerdan, The Autobiography of William Jerdan, iv, London, (1853), 52.
322
BIFRONS MANSION HOUSE
(1753-1857), who was certainly not inclined towards the Tudor style,
before going to the Board of Works. In this second post he 'designed
and fitted up the State apartments for holding courts and levees' in
St. James's Palace and also altered the Duke of Clarence's house
'with whom he was an especial personal favourite. ..' Jerdan records
that Hunt carried out other works in all departments of the royal
palaces. It is worth noting that Lord Conyngham may well have met
Hunt in the course of Hunt's work on the royal palaces.
Jerdan goes on to praise Tudor architecture in contrast to the
'naked, bizarre' Greek, Roman and Palladian and then says that
'Bifrons, the seat of the Dowager Marchioness of Conyngham, is a
fine original specimen of Mr. Hunt's skill .. .'
The only other house Hunt is known to have built in the south of
England is Danehurst in Sussex for Lt.-Col. Francis Davies, 19 a
veteran of the Peninsular War, probably in 1827. This house is
somewhat in Hunt's Tudor style as exemplified in his book Designs
for Parsonage Houses, Almshouses etc. If, abandoning his Tudor
style, Hunt had made some alterations to Bifrons, the question is
when?
Edward Taylor moved to Bourne Park sometime after 1824, and it
seems unlikely that he would have carried out any alterations to
Bifrons once he had let it. On the other hand, any work by Hunt
would probably have been carried out after, say, 1815 when at the
age of 24 he would have gained a few years' experience, leaving a
period of, say, nine years in which the work might have been done.
However, in view of the total dissimilarity between Hunt's known
work and interests and the style of the altered house as can be seen in
the late nineteenth-century photographs, it seems possible that for
some reason Jerdan was mistaken in his attribution of Bifrons in a
Tudor style to Hunt. On the other hand, Jerdan knew Hunt quite
well, and it seems strange that he should make such a mistake.
Certainly in 1806 in Brayley's Beauties of England and Wales20 and
again in 1829 in Ireland's History of the County of Kent,21 Bifrons is
described as a house rebuilt by Edward Taylor with no mention of
subsequent alterations. However, we have no record of the house's
appearance between the early days of Edward Taylor and the
photographs of the greatly changed house of the later years of the
nineteenth century.
There are in the villages of Bridge and Patrixbourne some half
19 D.M. Forrest, St. Raphael's, Danehurst, n.d.
20 Op. cit., 10.
21 W.H. Ireland, History of the County of Kent, ii (1829), 477.
323
B.M. THOMAS
a dozen cottages and two lodges to the Park with a Tudor cottage
look to them akin to John Nash's work at Blaise Hamlet near Bristol
(c. 1810) and in a style reminiscent of some of Hunt's illustrations to
his books.
Hunt had a pupil named G .H. Smith of whom little is known but to
whom some alterations to Bifrons in 1835 about which we know
nothing are attributed.
8. THE WORK OF THOMAS CUNDY
Henry, Marquess Conyngham, was much at Court for he was made
Lord Steward of the Household on the eve of George IV's coronation,
a post he held until the King's death in 1830. Henry died in 1832
and his widow remained at Bifrons until her death at the age of 91 in
1861.
On his mother's death, the second Marquess Conyngham took
possession of Bifrons until he died in 1876. Francis Conyngham had
the distinction, as Lord Chamberlain from 1835 to 1839, of
acquainting the young Princess Victoria of the death of King William
and so of her accession.
Soon after his mother's death Francis Conyngham carried out some
major works at Bifrons which were completed in 1863. The architect
was Thomas Cundy of Eaton Chambers, Pimlico. He was the third
generation of Cundys - all called Thomas - to take up architecture
and he trained in the office of his father, who in turn had inherited the
practice - and also the surveyorship of the Grosvenor Estates - from
his father. 22
Some of the accounts of the work have been preserved in the
Conyngham papers23 showing that the total expenditure was
£12,014--4-9 covering seven separate accounts. Only one of these
accounts still exists, that for the painter and decorator whose bill
came to £1,677 and covered such items as painting the Turkish Bath,
repairing and cleaning the fountain, scagliola work to two columns in
the dining room and putting up 40 pieces of French moire paper with
gilt moulding to boxings in the Drawing Room. Thomas Cundy's fees
amounted to some £678 and the Clerk of Works was paid nearly £115.
If one compares the photograph of the front of the house (Plate II),
which is unlikely to be earlier than the 1860s, with Oldfield's drawing
of the Taylor house the extent of these alterations seems to have been
22 Biography Database, R.I.B.A. Pers. Com.
23 Conyngham MS, U238, Kent County Archives, Ramsgate.
324
BfFRONS MANSION HOUSE
-
-
325
..,
-5
·=
V,
C
g
iii
0
.t:
0..
00
0 0
.t:
0..
-<
c
g
..,