After the Castle: Historical
echoes 1928 – present day
Of course, historical buildings such as Weddington Castle do not simply vanish without a trace. The Castle has left a
lasting legacy upon the area - as well as some intriguing mysteries. At this
point in time - nearly 80 years after its demolition - Weddington Castle is
passing out of the realm of living memory, and so the first hand recollections
of those who knew the Castle during its existence are lost to us. As mentioned
in the Introduction, what we do have left are disparate documents, both written
and photographic, with which to try to recreate of sense of what once was.
But we have something else to help us piece the past together: we have the
physical traces that such a building inevitably leaves behind, despite the best
efforts of modern developers.
Whilst a building such as Weddington Castle
can be demolished, the bricks and mortar of which it was constructed do not
just disappear. Indeed one can argue that the Castle never went away in one
sense, for most of the rubble was used
to build the subsequent Weddington housing estate of Castle Road and Shawe
Avenue upon, although some possibly went to the Countess Road area on the other
side of Nuneaton. From 1928, two large residences, Weddington Gardens and Alsted Lodge, were built by
Hope & Aldridge builders, and some of the Castle timber is believed to be in the
latter. Weddington Gardens was demolished in 1974-5 to make way for the Cleaver
Gardens flats, although its quartzite gateposts - now reduced from 8 feet to 3
feet high - remain next to the Weddington Post Office. The first part of the Weddington housing estate was built between 1930
and 1933, effectively joining the village to Nuneaton with compact blocks of
houses rather than the previous ribbon development along Weddington Road (formerly Derby
Lane). Effectively, Weddington ceased to exist as a distinct village in its own
right at around the same time as its Castle.
From 1935 to 1938 houses were built in Castle Road. Also, in 1938, the
Grove was converted into the Weddington Hotel. This later became 'The Grove' pub
and then 'The Fox and Crane' pub restaurant in 1996.
As regards the actual contents of the
Castle, many of these were sold off by the auctioneers James, Styles & Whitlock,
some of which are believed to be in the United States. Examples of sale items
include a fine old oak staircase and Italian carved marble mantelpieces.
Over the following decades Weddington has
continued to develop: an inevitable result of Nuneaton's expansion yet one
which has continued to erode the remnants of the old village. Whilst the
original arrangement of the Church, Church Farm and the Rectory survived into
the 1950s, the old Weddington Rectory was demolished in 1961 (intriguingly, part
of it had been closed off as it was said to be haunted). Its demise heralded a
new wave of housing development in the area and by the 1990s the modern village
had spread right up to the churchyard and Church Farm had been demolished.
Another building from the Castle estate to fall victim to demolition was the
Northern Gate-house Lodge, which was destroyed in 1961 (the last resident being
a Mrs Jessie Pearson).
Despite the passage of time however,
Weddington Castle and its estate has not quite given up all of its secrets. For
instance when, in 1988, the original Lower Farm was demolished, a high quality timber-frame
building was discovered within its construction. Its design
belonged to the South Western School and the frame bore numerous carpenter's
marks, with the main doorway (measuring less that 67" high) skilfully carved
with rebates and grooves. A number of explanations as to the origins have been
put forward, such as that it may have been the in situ remains of a sixteenth
century grand manor or farmhouse. Another possibility however, is that it comes from a
larger sixteenth century building which was demolished and sold - Lindley Hall
is possible, or even Weddington's
own Capital Mansion House: the precursor of Weddington Castle. This important
historical artefact was carefully dismantled and the oak
beams saved. These have now been incorporated into a house at Ashbourne in
Derbyshire.
Also, for many years a local legend
persisted of tunnels between the Castle and the Lodge and Church, and although
when the Northern Gate-house Lodge was demolished such stories were not borne
out, a tunnel was apparently discovered which led from the Grove to the
Castle during the former building's conversion into the 'Fox and Crane' pub
restaurant in 1996.
The original Weddington village remains
similarly shrouded in mystique: an archaeological evaluation was carried out in
1997 in a field to the north-east of St James Church to assess whether any
remains of Weddington's deserted mediaeval village survived in the area. No
mediaeval features were uncovered, although a single shard of 14th century
pottery was found. A subsequent evaluation in 2000 was equally inconclusive and
puzzling:
"No archaelogical deposits or artefacts
of medieval date were found during the evaluation. The absence of graves and
human remains is surprising as these would be expected to be adjacent to the
medieval church. The lack of human remains in this area suggests that the main
area for burial is located further away from the church. The area evaluated
contained modern services and a spread of rubble. It is possible that the latter
is a remnant of building demolition rubble from the earlier church; the Rev.
Tony Adams reported that such areas of rubble are located all over the
churchyard".
More substantial reminders of the Castle do
persist to this day; the street names Castle Road and Shawe Avenue for instance,
named in honour of the Castle's former owner. Indeed the Castle's original stone
crest of arms is preserved in the frontage of numbers 1 and 3 Shawe Avenue. This
bears Kay family motto: 'IN DEO SOLO SPEC MIA' (In God alone is my hope). A
well from the Castle survives near 31 Castle Road; the Weddington Social Club was built upon the
site of the icehouse, and the Southern Lodge building from the Castle grounds
remains as a private residence at 6 Brook Lane, off Weddington Road (pictured
right). And of
course there is 'The Grove' on Weddington Road, now 'The Fox and Crane' pub
restaurant. Despite the change in usage of this building the interior and
exterior have been sympathetically maintained, and one
still gains a sense of the grandeur of this former house and what remain of its
grounds.
Finally, Henry Shawe's dedicated windows
remain at St James' Church... and if one takes a stroll through the Weddington
churchyard, one will find a roll-call of personalities from the Castle's history
written upon the gravestones; from Humphrey Adderley to Henry Kay, from Francis Vincent to Lionel Place to Henry Cunliffe Shawe himself.
One can think of no more poignant reminder of how we are
all inextricably linked to our ancestors through a common bond. For we are all part
of history; be it past, present or future.