Canons Ashby
Canons Ashby, Daventry, Northamptonshire, NN11 3SD
One of the wonderful things about Great Britain is
that even its historical places have history. Canons Ashby once had
a famous person living ther, the poet John Dryden, however the house
was built by generations before and is an Elizabethan manor house. As
you approach the house and gardens you pass St Mary's church which is
the last remaining building of the abbey complex which originally gave
Canons Ashby its name, but on to the gardens.

Stately yew specimen Topiary
Formal gardens undoubtedly surrounded the sixteenth
century house as that was the current style but all traces of them disappeared
long ago. The current garden plan is largely the work of Edward Dryden
who laid down the paths, walls and terraces between 1708 and 1718 in
the style of royal gardeners such as George London and Henry Wise. The
gate piers were decorated in an antiquarian fashion including the globe
and lion crest of the Drydens.

Fine mix of geometry
Fortunately for us the conservative minded Drydens
continued with the design in the late eighteenth century when many other
houses were having their gardens ripped up and planted in the landscape
style of Lancelot "Capability" Brown. In the late nineteenth
Century when Alice Dryden photographed the garden it was largely mature
and what we see today. At this time the local barber was the topiarist
which somehow seems fitting. The rarity of the garden was being realised
by this time and Sir Henry Dryden opened the garden to the public and
provided a plan for a history of gardening produced at the time.

Shapes emulating churches
By 1904 the garden was to have a major influence on
the Arts and Crafts style of people such as Sir Edwin Lutyens and Gertrude
Jekyll. Although the garden was looked after during the 1920's and 30's
it began to become overgrown later, especially during the war years.

The Statue complements the Topiary
Many of the large trees were attacked by gales
or dutch elm disease in the middle of the twentieth century and when the
National Trust took over in 1981 they faced a huge task of pruning and
restoring the garden to the earlier plan. At the beginning of the twenty
first century all that glory is revealed once more.

Regimented but unique

Give it the bird!
What a walk up to your front door!
All photographs by Anthony Blagg.
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