s at BowoodThe first house at Bowood was built circa 1725 on the site of a
hunting lodge, by the former tenant
Sir Orlando Bridgeman, 2nd Baronet, who had purchased the property from
the Crown. His grandfather Sir Orlando Bridgeman,
Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, had been granted the lease by
Charles II. Bridgeman got into financial strife, and in 1739 under a
Chancery decree, the house and park were acquired by his principal creditor, Richard Long. In 1754 Long sold it to
the first Earl of Shelburne, who engaged the architect
Henry Keene to extend the house.
William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne, who served as Prime Minister from 1782 to 1783, was created
Marquess of Lansdowne to negotiate peace with America after the
War of Independence. He furnished Bowood and his London home,
Lansdowne House, with superb collections of paintings and classical sculpture, and commissioned
Robert Adam to decorate the grander rooms in Bowood and to add a magnificent
orangery, as well as a small
menagerie for wild animals where a leopard and an orangutan were kept in the 18th century. Adam also built a fine
mausoleum in the park for the first earl. Adam commissioned Benjamin Carter to sculpt chimney-pieces for the house. In the 1770s the two parts of the house at Bowood (the "Big House" and the "Little House") were joined by the construction of an enormous
drawing room. , London In World War I, the 5th Marchioness set up an auxiliary
Red Cross hospital in the orangery. During
World War II, the Big House was first occupied by a school, then by the
Royal Air Force. Afterwards it was left empty, and by 1955, it was so dilapidated that the 8th Marquess demolished it, employing architect F. Sortain Samuels to convert the Little House into a more comfortable home. Many country houses
were knocked down at this period. Before it was demolished, the Adam dining room was auctioned and bought by the
Lloyd's of London insurance market, which dismantled it and re-installed it as the Committee Room in
its 1958 building. The room was subsequently moved in 1986 to the 11th floor of
its current building, also on
Lime Street in the
City of London. A portico from the house was re-erected at
Roath Court, Cardiff. The mausoleum was designated as Grade I listed in 1960, ==21st century==