Country Life

Opening the shutters

Wolterton Hall, Norfolk, part II
The former home of Keith Day and Peter Sheppard

THE 18th-century writer, connoisseur and creator of Strawberry Hill, Horace Walpole, was not an admirer of his uncle and namesake, the builder of Wolterton. In his correspondence with friends, the younger Horace makes numerous allusions to the dirtiness, meanness and poor taste of the older. He did quixotically, however, think very highly of his uncle’s country seat. It was, he suggested, ‘one of the best houses of the size in England’.

As described last week, Wolterton was completed in 1741 under the direction of architect Thomas Ripley. Walpole’s qualification over its size was a comment on the way in which the building had been conceived; not as a conventional country house with spreading wings, but as a compactly planned building.

That original house was both enlarged and adapted in the subsequent ownership of the Walpole family, who proved determined custodians of it through a difficult 20th century. As illustrated in the present article, however, the house reflects a transformation brought about since 2016 by its recent owners Keith Day and Peter Sheppard. They sold the house last year and this article is a visual record of the remarkable interiors

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Country Life

Country Life3 min read
Aristotle’s Beach
SURROUNDED by the Aegean Sea, perched on two hills of a small, beautiful peninsula, Liotopi are the archaeological ruins of an ancient polis, the city-state of Stagira. On the northern hill, among oaks, pine, olive and spring flowers, lies the tomb o
Country Life2 min read
Tottering-by-gently
Visit Tottering-By-Gently on our website: www.countrylife.co.uk/tottering We are committed to only using magazine paper which is derived from responsibly managed, certified forestry and chlorine-free manufacture. The paper in this magazine was source
Country Life6 min read
All Over The Map
CALL it serendipity. Just as he was preparing to speak to COUNTRY LIFE about his most cherished possession, rare-book and map dealer Daniel Crouch chanced upon one he loved even more. ‘My answer to: “What would I never part with?” would have been dif

Related Books & Audiobooks