Edward Seymour, 12th Duke of Somerset commissioned the present mansion, which was completed in 1865. After his death, it passed to his daughter, Lady Helen Guendolen Ramsden (née Seymour) then to her son,
Sir John Frecheville Ramsden. The house was unoccupied until the
Second World War, when it was used for training as the
RAF Staff College. Following the War, Frecheville Ramsden used part of the property for chemical research into sisal by-products. After Frecheville Ramsden's death in 1958, the park was sold to a farmer, and the mansion and woodland were bought by the
Bruderhof community. In 1966, the Bruderhof moved to the United States, and the property was bought by
WEC International, a Christian evangelical mission agency, who gradually restored and improved the public parts of the house's interior. WEC International sold the mansion to a private owner in 2016 for £13 million. It was sold again in 2023 for just £6 million. ==Bulstrode Street==