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Cragside es una casa de campo victoriana cerca de la ciudad de Rothbury en Northumberland , Inglaterra. Fue el hogar de William Armstrong, primer barón Armstrong , fundador de la firma de armamentos Armstrong Whitworth . Magnate industrial , científico, filántropo e inventor de la grúa hidráulica y la pistola Armstrong , Armstrong también mostró su inventiva en el ámbito doméstico, convirtiendo a Cragside en la primera casa del mundo en iluminarse con energía hidroeléctrica. La finca estaba tecnológicamente avanzada; el arquitecto de la casa, Richard Norman Shaw, escribió que estaba equipado con "maravillosas máquinas hidráulicas que hacen todo tipo de cosas". [2] En los terrenos, Armstrong construyó presas y lagos para alimentar un aserradero, una lavandería que funciona con agua, las primeras versiones de un lavaplatos y un montaplatos , un elevador hidráulico y un asador hidroeléctrico . En 1887, Armstrong fue elevado a la nobleza , el primer ingeniero o científico en ser ennoblecido, y se convirtió en el barón Armstrong de Cragside.

El edificio original consistía en un pequeño pabellón de tiro que Armstrong construyó entre 1862 y 1864. En 1869, contrató al arquitecto Richard Norman Shaw para ampliar el sitio, y en dos fases de trabajo entre 1869 y 1882, transformaron la casa en un norte Neuschwanstein . El resultado fue descrito por el arquitecto y escritor Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel como "una de las composiciones más dramáticas de toda la arquitectura". [3] Armstrong llenó la casa con una importante colección de arte; él y su esposa fueron patrocinadores de muchos artistas británicos del siglo XIX . Cragside se convirtió en una parte integral de las operaciones comerciales de Armstrong: invitados de honor bajo el techo de Armstrong, incluido el Shah de Persia , elKing of Siam y dos futuros primeros ministros de Japón , también fueron clientes de sus emprendimientos comerciales.

Tras la muerte de Armstrong en 1900, sus herederos lucharon por mantener la casa y la propiedad. En 1910, se vendió lo mejor de la colección de arte de Armstrong y, en la década de 1970, en un intento por cumplir con el impuesto a la herencia , se presentaron planes para el desarrollo residencial a gran escala de la propiedad. En 1971, el National Trust pidió al historiador de la arquitectura Mark Girouard que compilara un nomenclátor de las casas victorianas más importantes de Gran Bretaña que el Trust debería intentar salvar en caso de que alguna vez fueran vendidas. Girouard colocó a Cragside en la parte superior de la lista; en 1977, la casa fue adquirida por el Fideicomiso con la ayuda de una subvención del Fondo Nacional de Tierras . Un edificio catalogado de grado I desde 1953, Cragside ha estado abierto al público desde 1979.

Historia [ editar ]

Armstrong en la década de 1870

William Armstrong[edit]

William Armstrong was born on 26 November 1810 in Newcastle upon Tyne, the son of a corn merchant.[4] Trained as a solicitor, he moved to London before he was twenty. Returning to Newcastle, in 1835 he met and married Margaret Ramshaw, the daughter of a builder.[5] A keen amateur scientist, Armstrong began to conduct experiments in both hydraulics and electricity. In 1847, he abandoned the law for manufacturing and established W. G. Armstrong and Company at a site at Elswick, outside Newcastle.[6] By the 1850s, with his design for the Armstrong Gun, Armstrong laid the foundations for an armaments firm that would, before the end of the century, see Krupp as its only world rival.[7][8] He established himself as a figure of national standing: his work supplying artillery to the British Army was seen as an important response to the failures of Britain's forces during the Crimean War.[8] In 1859, he was knighted and made Engineer of Rifled Ordnance, becoming the principal supplier of armaments to both the Army and the Navy.[9][a]

Shooting box: 1862–1865[edit]

Armstrong had spent much of his childhood at Rothbury, escaping from industrial Newcastle for the benefit of his often poor health.[12] He returned to the area in 1862, not having taken a holiday for over fifteen years.[13] On a walk with friends, Armstrong was struck by the attractiveness of the site for a house. Returning to Newcastle, he bought a small parcel of land and decided to build a modest house on the side of a moorland crag. He intended a house of eight or ten rooms and a stable for a pair of horses.[13] The house was completed in the mid-1860s by an unknown architect:[14] a two-storey shooting box of little architectural distinction, it was nevertheless constructed and furnished to a high standard.[15]

Fairy palace: 1869–1900[edit]

Armstrong's architect for Cragside's expansion was the Scot R. Norman Shaw. Shaw had begun his career in the office of William Burn and had later studied under Anthony Salvin and George Edmund Street. Salvin had taught him the mastery of internal planning which was essential for the design of the large and highly variegated houses which the Victorian wealthy craved. Salvin and Street had taught him to understand the Gothic Revival.[16] At only 24, he won the RIBA Gold Medal and Travelling Studentship.[17] The connection between Armstrong and Shaw was made when Armstrong purchased a picture, Prince Hal taking the crown from his father's bedside by John Callcott Horsley, which proved too large to fit into his town house in Jesmond, Newcastle.[18] Horsley was a friend of both, and recommended that Shaw design an extension to the banqueting hall Armstrong had previously built in the grounds.[19] When this was completed in 1869, Shaw was asked for enlargements and improvements to the shooting lodge Armstrong had had built at Rothbury four years earlier. This was the genesis of the transformation of the house between 1869 and 1884.[20] Over the next thirty years, Cragside became the centre of Armstrong's world; reminiscing years later, in his old age, he remarked, "had there been no Cragside, I shouldn't be talking to you today – for it has been my very life".[21]

The architectural historian Andrew Saint records that Shaw sketched out the whole design for the "future fairy palace" in a single afternoon, while Armstrong and his guests were out on a shooting party.[20] After this rapid initial design, Shaw worked on building the house for over 20 years. The long building period, and Armstrong's piecemeal, and changeable, approach to the development of the house, and his desire to retain the original shooting lodge at its core,[22] occasionally led to tensions between client and architect, and to a building that lacks an overall unity.[23] Armstrong changed the purpose of several rooms as his interests developed, and the German architectural historian Hermann Muthesius, writing just after Armstrong's death in 1900, noted that "the house did not find the unqualified favour with Shaw's followers that his previous works had done, nor did it entirely satisfy (Shaw)".[24] Nevertheless, Shaw's abilities, as an architect and as a manager of difficult clients, ensured that Cragside was composed "with memorable force".[16]

The top-lit Gallery, formerly Armstrong's museum

As well as being Armstrong's home, Cragside acted as an enormous display case for his ever-expanding art collection. The best of his pictures were hung in the drawing room, but Shaw also converted the museum into a top-lit picture gallery.[25] Pride of place was given to John Everett Millais's Chill October, bought by Armstrong at the Samuel Mendel sale at Christie's in 1875. Armstrong also bought Millais' Jephthah's Daughter at the Mendel sale. Both were sold in the 1910 sale; Chill October is now in the private collection of Andrew Lloyd Webber,[26] and Jephthah's Daughter is held by the National Museum Cardiff.[27][b]

Cragside was an important setting for Armstrong's commercial activities. The architectural writer Simon Jenkins records: "Japanese, Persian, Siamese and German dignitaries paid court to the man who equipped their armies and built their navies".[30] In his 2005 book Landmarks of Britain Clive Aslet notes visits with the same purpose from the Crown Prince of Afghanistan and the Shah of Persia.[31] The Shah Naser al-Din visited in July 1889, and the Afghan prince Nasrullah Khan in June 1895. Armstrong's biographer Henrietta Heald mentions two future Prime Ministers of Japan, Katō Takaaki and Saitō Makoto, among a steady stream of Japanese industrialists, naval officers, politicians and royalty who inscribed their names in the Cragside visitors' book.[32] The Chinese diplomat Li Hung Chang visited in August 1896. King Chulalongkorn of Siam was staying in August 1897, when activity at the Elswick Works was disrupted by a bitter strike over pay and hours.[33]

In August 1884 the Prince and Princess of Wales (the future Edward VII and Queen Alexandra) made a three-day visit to Cragside; it was the peak of Armstrong's social career. The royal arrival at the house was illuminated by ten thousand lamps and a vast array of Chinese lanterns hung in the trees on the estate; fireworks were launched from six balloons, and a great bonfire was lit on the Simonside Hills.[34] On the second day of their visit, the Prince and Princess travelled to Newcastle, to formally open the grounds of Armstrong's old house, Jesmond Dean, which he had by then donated to the city as a public park. It is still a public park today, a ravine known as Jesmond Dene.[35] Three years later, at the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria, Armstrong was ennobled as Baron Armstrong of Cragside, and became the first engineer and the first scientist to be granted a peerage.[36][c] Among many other celebrations, he was awarded the freedom of the City of Newcastle. In his vote of thanks, the mayor noted that one in four of the entire population of the city was employed directly by Armstrong, or by companies over which he presided.[39]

Armstrong's heirs: 1900–present[edit]

Armstrong died at Cragside on 27 December 1900, aged 90, and was buried beside his wife in the churchyard at Rothbury.[40] His gravestone carries an epitaph: His scientific attainments gained him a world wide celebrity and his great philanthropy the gratitude of the poor.[41] Cragside, and Armstrong's fortune, were inherited by his great-nephew, William Watson-Armstrong.[42] Watson-Armstrong lacked Armstrong's commercial acumen and a series of poor financial investments led to the sale of much of the great art collection in 1910.[43] In 1972, the death of Watson-Armstrong's heir, William John Montagu Watson-Armstrong, saw the house and estate threatened by large-scale residential development, intended to raise the money to pay a large inheritance tax bill.[44] In 1971, when advising the National Trust on the most important Victorian houses to be preserved for the nation in the event of their sale, Mark Girouard had identified Cragside as the top priority.[45] A major campaign saw the house and grounds acquired by the Trust in 1977,[42] with the aid of a grant from the National Land Fund.[44]

In 2007, Cragside reopened after undergoing an 18-month refurbishment programme[46] that included rewiring the whole house.[45] It has become one of the most-visited sites in North East England, with some 255,005 visitors in 2019.[47] The Trust continues restoration work, allowing more of the house to be displayed: Armstrong's electrical room, in which he conducted experiments on electrical charges towards the end of his life, was re-opened in 2016.[48] The experiments had led to the publication in 1897 of Armstrong's last work, Electrical Movement in Air and Water, illustrated with remarkable early photographs by his friend John Worsnop.[49]

The Trust continues the reconstruction of the wider estate, with plans to redevelop Armstrong's glasshouses, including the palm house, the ferneries and the orchid house.[50]

Architecture and description[edit]

The entrance front – Shaw's "Wagnerian"[14] overture

Cragside is an example of Shaw's Tudor revival style;[14] the Pevsner Architectural Guide for Northumberland called it "the most dramatic Victorian mansion in the North of England".[14] The entrance front was described by Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel as "one of the most dramatic compositions in all architecture",[3] and the architectural historian James Stevens Curl regarded the house as "an extraordinarily accomplished Picturesque composition".[51] Criticism focuses on the building's lack of overall coherence; in The National Trust Book of the English House, Aslet and Powers describe the house as "large and meandering",[52] and the architectural critics Dixon and Muthesius write that "the plan rambles along the hillside".[53] Saint is even more dismissive: for him, "the plan of Cragside is little better than a straggle".[54] The half-timbering above the entrance has also been criticised as unfaithful to the vernacular tradition of the North-East.[14] Shaw would have been unconcerned; desiring it for "romantic effect, he reached out for it like an artist reaching out for a tube of colour".[55]

The architectural historian J. Mordaunt Crook considers Cragside to be one of the very few country houses built by the Victorian commercial plutocracy that was truly "avant-garde or trend-setting".[56] In his study, The Rise of the Nouveaux Riches, Crook contends that many new-monied owners were too domineering, and generally chose second-rate architects, as these tended to be more "pliant", allowing the clients to get their own way, rather than those of the first rank such as Shaw.[56] The Rhenish flavour of the house makes a notable contrast with a country house that was almost contemporaneous with Cragside: the Villa Hügel constructed by Armstrong's greatest rival, Alfred Krupp.[57] While Armstrong's Northumbrian fastness drew on Teutonic inspirations, his German competitor designed and built a house that was an exercise in neoclassicism.[58]

The location for the house was described by Mark Girouard as "a lunatic site".[59] Pevsner and Richmond call both the setting and the house Wagnerian.[14] The ledge on which it stands is narrow, and space for the repeated expansions could only be found by dynamiting the rock face behind, or by building upwards. Such challenges only drove Armstrong on, and overcoming the technical barriers to construction gave him great pleasure.[60] His task was made easier by the use of the workforce and the technology of the Elswick Works.[61] The architectural historian Jill Franklin notes that the vertiginous fall of the site is so steep that the drawing room, on a level with the first-floor landing at the front of the house, meets the rock face at the back.[62]

Jenkins describes the plan of the house as "simpler than the exterior suggests".[30] The majority of the reception rooms are located on the ground floor, as are the accompanying service rooms.[30] The exception is the large extension Shaw added to the south-east from 1882.[63] This includes the drawing room, completed for the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales, in August 1884.[43]

The house has been a Grade I listed building since 21 October 1953,[64] the listing citing inter alia its "largely complete Victorian interior".[64] The architectural correspondent of The Times, Marcus Binney, who was closely involved in the campaign to bring Cragside to the National Trust, noted the historic importance of this "virtually untouched interior",[65] with its collections of furnishings, furniture (much designed especially for Cragside), and fine and decorative arts, with work by many notable designers of the period, including William Morris, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Philip Webb and Edward Burne-Jones.[66] Pevsner notes that the art collection demonstrated "what was permissible to the Victorian nobleman in the way of erotica".[67]

Kitchen, service rooms and Turkish bath[edit]

The kitchen is large by Victorian standards and forms a considerable apartment with the butler's pantry.[14] It displays Armstrong's "technical ingenuity" to the full, having a dumb waiter and a spit both run on hydraulic power.[14] An electric gong announced mealtimes.[68] For the visit of Edward and Alexandra, Armstrong brought in the Royal caterers, Gunters, who used the kitchen to prepare an eight-course menu which included oysters, turtle soup, stuffed turbot, venison, grouse, peaches in maraschino jelly and brown bread ice cream.[69] Off the kitchen, under the library, is a Turkish bath suite, an unusual item in a Victorian private house.[14] The writer Michael Hall suggests that the bath, with its plunge pool, was intended as much to demonstrate Armstrong's copious water supply as for actual use.[16] As was often the case, Armstrong also found practical application for his pleasures: steam generated by the Turkish bath supported the provision of heating for the house.[70]

Library and dining room[edit]

The library – "Shaw's greatest domestic interior"[71]

Girouard describes the library as "one of the most sympathetic Victorian rooms in England".[55] It belongs to the first phase of Shaw's construction work and was completed in 1872. It has a large bay window which gives views out over the bridge and the glen.[72] The room is half-panelled in oak and the fireplace includes fragments of Egyptian onyx, collected during Armstrong's visit to the country in 1872.[73] The library originally contained some of Armstrong's best pictures, although most were rehung in the gallery or drawing room, following Shaw's later building campaign of the 1880s, and then sold in 1910, ten years after Armstrong's death.[74] The highlight was Albert Joseph Moore's Follow My Leader, dating from 1872.[43] Andrew Saint considers the room "Shaw's greatest domestic interior".[71] The dining room off the library contains a "Gothic" fireplace with an inglenook.[75][d]

A portrait of Armstrong by Henry Hetherington Emmerson shows him sitting in the inglenook with his dogs,[81] under a carved inscription on the mantlepiece reading East or West, Hame's Best.[75] The stained glass in the windows of the inglenook is by William Morris, and other glass from Morris & Co., to designs by Rossetti, Burne-Jones, Webb and Ford Madox Brown, was installed in the library, gallery and upper stairs.[82]

Owl suite[edit]

The Owl rooms were constructed in the first building campaign and formed a suite for important guests.[8][83] Their name derives from the carved owls that decorate the woodwork and the bed.[83] The room is panelled in American Black walnut, the same wood from which the tester bed is carved.[75] Saint notes that Shaw was "proud of the design", displaying a further "owl-bed" in an exhibition in 1877.[84] The Prince and Princess of Wales occupied the rooms during their stay at Cragside in 1884.[83] Other bedrooms, notably the Yellow and White rooms, were hung with wallpaper by William Morris, including early versions of his Fruit and Bird and Trellis designs. The wallpapers were reprinted using the original printing blocks and rehung in the National Trust's renovations.[85]

Gallery[edit]

The gallery originally formed Armstrong's museum room and was built by Shaw between 1872 and 1874.[86] It led to the observatory in the Gilnockie Tower. Later, the room formed a processional route to the newly created drawing room, and was transformed into a gallery for pictures and sculpture.[87] Its lighting displayed further evidence of Armstrong's technical ingenuity. Provided with twelve overhead lamps, the lighting for the room could be supplemented by a further eight lamps, powered by electric current transferred from the lamps in the dining room when they were no longer required.[88] Lighting, and his means of providing it, mattered to Armstrong, on both technical and aesthetic levels; he wrote, "in the passageways and stairs the lamps are used without shades and present a most beautiful and star-like appearance."[88]

Drawing room[edit]

The drawing room and inglenook fireplace – "sensational",[30] "spectacular"[89] or "sickening",[90] according to taste

The drawing room was constructed in the 1880s phase of building, when Armstrong had sold his Jesmond house and was residing solely at Cragside.[42] Aslet suggests that the inspiration for the design was the great hall at Haddon Hall, Derbyshire,[31] although Saint considers Shaw's Dawpool Hall, Cheshire as the more likely source.[77][91] Pevsner and Richmond mention Hardwick Hall and Hatfield House as possible models for the "spectacular" overall design.[89] The room contains a colossal marble inglenook chimneypiece, reputed to weigh ten tons, and designed by Shaw's assistant, W. R. Lethaby.[91] Muthesius describes the fireplace as a "splendid example ... with finely composed relief decoration".[92] Jenkins considers it "surely the world's biggest inglenook" and describes the overall impact of the room as "sensational", noting the top-lit ceiling and the elaborate Jacobethan plasterwork.[30] Others have been less complimentary; the writer Reginald Turnor, no admirer either of Shaw or of Victorian architecture and its architects more generally,[93] wrote of the room's "flamboyant and rather sickening detail".[90] By the time of its construction, Shaw, increasingly working for clients of great wealth, had moved on from his "Old English" style,[94] and the room is designed and decorated in a grander and more opulent Renaissance taste.[42][95]

Billiard room[edit]

The billiard room extension of 1895 is by Frederick Waller.[96] It replaced a laboratory, in which Armstrong conducted experiments in electric currents.[97] The billiard table and furniture was supplied by Burroughes and Watts.[98] The billiard room and adjacent gun room[99] formed a smoking suite, the previous absence of which is evidenced in a watercolour painted to commemorate the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales. The Prince and Armstrong are shown smoking cigars on the terrace, as Victorian convention did not permit smoking in the principal reception rooms.[100][101][e]

Technology[edit]

Cragside's screw turbine, installed in 2014
Burnfoot Power House, electricity generator

After his first visit in 1869, Shaw described the house in a letter to his wife, noting the "wonderful hydraulic machines that do all sorts of things you can imagine".[2] By building dams, Armstrong created five new lakes on the estate, Debdon, Tumbleton, Blackburn, and the Upper and Lower lakes at Nelly's Moss.[104] In 1868, a hydraulic engine was installed. Inspired by a watermill on the Dee in Dentdale,[105] in 1870 Armstrong installed a Siemens dynamo in what was the world's first hydroelectric power station.[67] The generators, which also provided power for the farm buildings on the estate, were constantly extended and improved to meet the increasing electrical demands in the house. The 2006 regeneration project included extensive rewiring.[45] A new screw turbine, with a 17-metre (56 ft)-long Archimedes' screw, was installed in 2014; it can provide 12 kW, supplying around 10 per cent of the property's electricity consumption.[f][107]

The electricity generated was used to power an arc lamp installed in the picture gallery in 1878. This was replaced in 1880 by Joseph Swan's incandescent lamps in what Swan considered "the first proper installation" of electric lighting.[108] Armstrong knew Swan well and had chaired the presentation of Swan's new lamps to the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne. Historic England describes Cragside as the "first (house) in the world to be lit by electricity derived from water power".[64] The use of electricity to run the house's appliances and internal systems made Cragside a pioneer of home automation; one of the first private residences to have a dishwasher, a vacuum cleaner and a washing machine, the conservators Sarah Schmitz and Caroline Rawson suggest Cragside was "the place where modern living began".[45] The spit in the kitchen was also powered by hydraulics.[31] The conservatory contained a self-watering system for the pot plants, which turned on water-powered revolving stands.[16] Telephony was introduced, both between the rooms in the house, and between the house and other buildings on the estate.[109] A plaque at Bamburgh Castle, Armstrong's other residence on the Northumbrian coast, records that his development of these new automated technologies "emancipated ... much of the world from household drudgery".[110]

Grounds and estate[edit]

Armstrong's bridge over the Debdon Burn

Cragside is named after Cragend Hill above the house, and is surrounded by an extensive rock garden, with a collection of rhododendrons, one of which is named after Lady Armstrong, who made a considerable contribution to the design and construction of the gardens,[111] and large plantings of mostly coniferous trees.[112] Among these is the tallest Scots pine in Britain, at a height of 131ft (40m).[113] Over one hundred years after their planting, Jill Franklin wrote that, "the great, dark trees form a protective barrier to (Armstrong's) home".[114] Armstrong continued to buy land after the purchase of the original site and by the 1880s the gardens and grounds comprised some 1,700 acres,[16] with the wider estate, including Armstrong's agricultural holdings, extending to 15,000 acres according to Henrietta Heald's 2012 biography of Armstrong,[115] and to over 16,000 acres according to the historian David Cannadine.[116] David Dougan records the traditional claim that Armstrong planted over seven million trees in the gardens and parkland.[117] The estate is a sanctuary for some of the last remaining red squirrel colonies in England.[44]

Tumbleton Stables, Cragside

The glen north-west of the house is spanned by an iron bridge, crossing the Debdon Burn, constructed to Armstrong's design[118] at his Elswick Works in the 1870s.[67] It is a Grade II* listed structure[119] and was restored by the Trust, and reopened to the public in 2008–2009.[120] The gardens themselves are listed Grade I,[121] and some of the architectural and technological structures have their own historic listings.[122] The Clock Tower, which regulated life on the estate,[123] dates from the time of the construction of the shooting lodge, and might have been designed by the same architect; it is not by Shaw.[124] It is possible that Armstrong himself designed the clock.[125] Like the bridge, the Clock Tower has a Grade II* listing.[125] The formal gardens, where Armstrong's great greenhouses stood and which were long separated from the main estate, have now been acquired by the Trust.[126]

Media appearances[edit]

Cragside has featured in an Open University Arts Foundation Course,[127] Jonathan Meades's documentary series Abroad Again in Britain,[128] BBC One's Britain's Hidden Heritage,[129] and Glorious Gardens from above,[130] and ITV's series Inside the National Trust.[131] The 2017 film The Current War was partly filmed at the estate.[132] Cragside featured as the basis for the representation of Lockwood Manor in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.[133]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ Britain's military deficiencies had been exposed in the Crimean War. At the time, Britain, in common with other European powers, had a nationalised gun-making industry.[10] Armstrong's appointment in 1858 as Engineer of Rifled Ordnance saw the almost complete transfer of responsibility for production to his private Elswick Ordnance Company[11] and the development of the first breech-loading gun.[10] Commercial rivalries and governmental in-fighting saw the cancellation of all of Armstrong's contracts in 1862, and in 1863 he resigned his post, merging the EOC with his other engineering concerns to form Sir W G Armstrong and Co.[11]
  2. ^ There are conflicting views as to the price Armstrong paid for the paintings. His 2012 biographer Henrietta Heald quotes Armstrong in a letter to his wife: "I have bought Chill October and Jephthah for 900 guineas – a big price but much less than they were expected to bring". Hugh Dixon, in the 2007 guidebook to Cragside, records that Armstrong paid 3,800 guineas for Jephthah's Daughter alone, "one of (his) most expensive purchases".[28] The art historian Gerald Reitlinger gives the following prices in his definitive guide: Chill October, £3,255 and Jephthah's Daughter, £3,990 (that is, 3,100 guineas and 3,800 guineas respectively). Their relative values had changed substantially by 1910: Chill October realised £5,040 but Jephthah only £1,260 (4,800 and 1,200 guineas).[29]
  3. ^ Others have claimed the honour of the first scientific peerage for the physicist Lord Kelvin whose barony, awarded in 1892, was granted entirely in recognition of his scientific achievements.[37][38]
  4. ^ Shaw made the construction of inglenooks something of a speciality. He built his first at Cranbrook for John Calcott Horsley, who later introduced Shaw to Armstrong.[76] As well as those at Cragside, two notable examples were created for the now-demolished Dawpool Hall on the Wirral.[77] One of these now forms the porch of The Pantheon at Portmeirion[78] and the other went unsold on eBay in 2012.[79] Shaw's biographer, Andrew Saint writes, "inglenooks are the decorative pièce de résistance of the Shaw country house".[80]
  5. ^ Attitudes towards smoking indoors changed significantly in the Victorian period. The architect Robert Kerr, more famous for his textbook on the design of Victorian houses than for his buildings, wrote in 1864, "The pitiable resources to which some gentlemen are driven, even in their own houses, in order to be able to enjoy the pestiferous luxury of a cigar, have given rise to the occasional introduction of an apartment specially dedicated to the use of Tobacco."[102] The historian Jill Franklin noted that "smoking was still completely forbidden in some houses as late as the 1850s", and that only in "more tolerant houses could (gentlemen) use the servants' hall or the harness room of the stables".[103]
  6. ^ Armstrong also investigated the possibilities of applying technological innovations to agricultural activities; in the mid-1890s he constructed a hydraulic silage plant on the estate at Cragend Farm. It was not a success, due to the amount of manual labour required and the gases which the process produced.[106]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Girouard 1979, p. 307.
  2. ^ a b Saint 1992, p. 17.
  3. ^ a b Ferriday 1963, p. 70.
  4. ^ Saint 1992, p. 6.
  5. ^ Saint 1992, p. 7.
  6. ^ Heald 2012, p. 63.
  7. ^ Saint 1992, p. 13.
  8. ^ a b c Greeves 2008, p. 106.
  9. ^ Heald 2012, p. 150.
  10. ^ a b Friedman 2011, p. 17.
  11. ^ a b Johnston & Buxton 2013, pp. 57–58.
  12. ^ Dougan 1991, p. 119.
  13. ^ a b Heald 2012, pp. 164–165.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Pevsner & Richmond 2002, p. 244.
  15. ^ Heald 2012, p. 168.
  16. ^ a b c d e Hall 2009, p. 118.
  17. ^ Turnor 1950, p. 97.
  18. ^ Hall 2009, p. 117.
  19. ^ Girouard 1979, pp. 307–308.
  20. ^ a b Saint 2010, p. 80.
  21. ^ Heald 2012, p. 165.
  22. ^ Girouard 1979, p. 310.
  23. ^ Saint 1992, pp. 18–19.
  24. ^ Muthesius 1979, p. 24.
  25. ^ Muthesius 1979, p. 90.
  26. ^ Sykes, Alan (15 March 2013). "Palace of a modern magician". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  27. ^ Heald 2012, p. 282.
  28. ^ Dixon 2007, p. 9.
  29. ^ Reitlinger 1961, pp. 389–390.
  30. ^ a b c d e Jenkins 2003, pp. 564–565.
  31. ^ a b c Aslet 2005, pp. 385–386.
  32. ^ Heald 2012, p. 278.
  33. ^ Smith 2005, p. 33.
  34. ^ Smith 2005, p. 35.
  35. ^ Smith 2005, p. 37.
  36. ^ Heald 2012, p. 294.
  37. ^ Smith & Norton Wise 1989, p. 801.
  38. ^ Schobert 2014, p. 154.
  39. ^ Heald 2012, p. 296.
  40. ^ Smith 2005, p. 44.
  41. ^ Historic England (25 August 1987). "Monument to First Lord Armstrong, Rothbury (1371120)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  42. ^ a b c d Hall 2009, p. 121.
  43. ^ a b c Girouard 1979, p. 314.
  44. ^ a b c Binney 2007, p. 389.
  45. ^ a b c d Schmitz, Sarah; Rawson, Caroline (2006). "Cragside: Rewiring a Temple to High Victorian Technology". The Building Conservation Directory. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  46. ^ Thorpe, Vanessa (31 March 2007). "Restored: the world's first hydroelectric house". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  47. ^ "ALVA - Association of Leading Visitor Attractions". www.alva.org.uk. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  48. ^ Henderson, Tony (2 August 2016). "The Cragside room which indulged Lord Armstrong's lifelong fascination with electricity". Chronicle Live. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  49. ^ Smith 2005, p. 42.
  50. ^ Dixon 2007, p. 48.
  51. ^ Curl 1990, p. 119.
  52. ^ Aslet & Powers 1985, p. 164.
  53. ^ Dixon & Muthesius 1993, p. 54.
  54. ^ Saint 2010, p. 82.
  55. ^ a b Girouard 1979, p. 312.
  56. ^ a b Crook 1999, pp. 70–71.
  57. ^ Dougan 1991, p. 118.
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External links[edit]

  • Official website