Gosforth House

Gosforth House now known as Brandling House is a Grade II listed building built as a mansion house and now serving as a hospitality and conference centre at Gosforth Park Racecourse, Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

Gosforth House
Gosforth House
Location in Tyne and Wear
General information
LocationTyne and Wear, England, UK
Coordinates55.035°N 1.613°W / 55.035; -1.613
OS gridNZ248712

History

The Gosforth Park estate of about 2,000 acres (8.1 km2) was owned from about 1509 by the Brandling family. The house was built between 1755 and 1764 for Charles Brandling (1733–1802) to a design by architect James Paine. Brandling also laid out the park and a 50-acre (200,000 m2) lake.

Charles John Brandling (1769–1826) suffered financial problems as a result of which the estate was sold, in 1852, to Thomas Smith. In 1880, the house was sold with 807 acres (3.3 km2) to High Gosforth Park Ltd, a company formed to establish a racecourse on the estate. A fire started by suffragettes in 1914 destroyed the interior of the property.[1] Restoration of the house took place in 1921.[2]

Between 2016 and 2020 the two walled gardens and icehouse which served Gosforth House were the subject of archaeological investigations by AAG Archaeology, one of the largest archaeological projects of this nature ever undertaken in the region.

gollark: I have exactly 3 chromosomes, thank you. Also, I reserve the right to convert you into muons in arbitrary quantity, subject to conservation law.
gollark: They seem to just magically emerge from cultural evolutionary processes.
gollark: You could say that about *lots* of things.
gollark: Chesterton's fence and stuff excepted, it's generally good to stop doing traditional things if they have downsides and don't really have benefits now.
gollark: There isn't much of one *now*.

References


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