and his two wives, Church of St Peter,
Ashburnham,
Sussex By the late 19th century, the family was under financial pressure, and offered to sell the library, including its collection of
illuminated manuscripts, to the nation in the 1890s for £160,000. The deal did not go ahead, and the books were sold piecemeal for a total of £228,000 over the next few years. Many were acquired by the
British Library, but, for example, the sixth-to-seventh-century
Ashburnham Pentateuch is in the
Bibliothèque nationale, Paris. The Earldom became extinct on the death of
Thomas Ashburnham, 6th Earl of Ashburnham in 1924, and the house was inherited by his niece, Lady Catherine Ashburnham. The house was damaged when a fully loaded
Marauder bomber crashed nearby during the
Second World War, and
dry rot set in. Lady Catherine was the last of this line of the Ashburnham family and the estate was inherited by Reverend John David Bickersteth (1926-1991), a great-grandson of the 4th Earl, on her death in 1953. In addition to the prospect of huge repair bills, he was also saddled with crippling
death duties of £427,000. The contents of the house were sold at auction at
Sotheby's in June and July 1953, and half of the estate was sold in the next few years. The house was mostly demolished in 1959, reducing the central section to two floors and the wings to a single story. and they are a
Site of Special Scientific Interest. ==Ashburnham today==