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KINGSTON
HOUSE
In 1542, John Latton bought the 3 estates of Kingston
Bagpuize. Thomas Latton, born in 1622 inherited the estate at the
age of 9. At that time the family lived in an old moated house near
the site of the present Kingston House. Thomas Latton built the
present Kingston House between 1660-70. His son sold it to Edmund
Fettiplace in 1670. The house was probably remodelled from the ground
floor up in the 1720s. Edmund Fettiplaces daughter Elizabeth
married John Blandy. The Blandy family owned Kingston House from
1728-1917 when the sixth John Blandy (John Blandy-Jenkins) sold
it two years after coming of age in 1917.

The North Lodge Gates
of Kingston House
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Until 1865 the house
was approached down an avenue from the east side with entrance
gates and a screen where the ha-ha now is. In 1865 the gates
were moved to their present position, near the church, and
the imposing trees, Wellingtonias, were planted near where
the gates had been.
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Edward Anthony Strauss, MP for North Berks, bought
the entire estate in 1917. He was forced to sell the house and its
contents together with the estate, which included most houses in
Kingston Bagpuize, when his firm of Strauss & Co Ltd, the grain
and seed merchants went bankrupt.
He came to Berkshire in 1897 and lived in New
House, the Dower House of the estate, before moving to Kingston
House in 1900. In 1906 he became MP for Southwark. His nephew Edward
Albert Lessing (born 1890) became MP for North Berkshire in 1923.
After the Second World War, Marlie Raphael cleared
the Nissen huts and made a woodland garden, a variety of flower
beds and stocked the grounds with rare and interesting plants from
all over the world. The present owners, Virginia and Francis Grant
are working to restore the gardens.
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Behind the house the stable courtyard contains
a granary, stables, cowsheds, dairy and malthouse where beer
was brewed for estate workers until the 1920s. The stable
clock was made by Lord Grimthorpe, who made the clock in Big
Ben tower. The buildings have been renovated and used for
residential and light commercial use.
The old kitchen garden is now leased and
is being planted as exhibition and nursery beds of herbs.
A small part of the Victorian glasshouses remain.
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Kingston Bagpuize House
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