Seaton Deleval Hall
Seaton Delaval Hall, Seaton Sluice, Whitley Bay, Northumberland,
NE26 4QR
Seaton Delaval is the property of Lord Hastings and
the house is, as Estate Agents would have it, in need of a little restoration.
To be fair it was without a roof for fifty years and the major work
that has been done already is a triumph even though there is a good
way to go before completion. A completion which alas may never be achieved
due to the phenomenal cost of such things and the state of the major
structures. Built by Sir John Vanbrugh in 1718, he of Blenheim Palace
and Castle Howard fame and thought by many to be his finest work, but
two major fires in the Eighteenth Century and the attentions of billeted
troops during both World Wars in the Twentieth will strain your imagination.

Main formal gardens

Samson and the Philistine
But we don't want to tell you that. We're here to
see the garden. Lord Hastings commissioned Jim Russell of Sunningdale
Nurseries in 1950 to design a parterre to replace a derelict rose walk.
He became so proficient at his task that he went on to work at Castle
Howard in Yorkshire creating an internationally renowned arboretum.
During the 1950's and 60's mainly under the direction of Lord Hasting's
wife, tennis courts were torn up, hedges laid and lawns established
to give a fine sweep to the formal garden. Here box hedging abounds
and the tall obelisks present a pleasing symmetry although recent drought
has caused some damage to a few of the forms which are made up of three
conifers in each case. Yew hedging surrounds the more recent pond garden
and provides an intimate area which I suspect is much used by the family
who are still in residence in one of the wings, which is the only habitable
part of the house at the present time

Pond garden

Side parterre
All photographs by Anthony Blagg.
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