visible in the background Fermor had purchased a large collection of marble statues from the Arundel collection some of which he used to decorate the estate. These were removed and sold together with other items by
George Fermor, 2nd Earl of Pomfret (1722–1785) (son of the 1st Earl), then in financial difficulties, and were bought by his mother
Henrietta Jeffreys, daughter of John Jeffreys, 2nd Baron Jeffreys of Wem, who in 1755 donated them to the
Ashmolean Museum in
Oxford. The house Hawksmoor built at Easton Neston can best be described as a miniature
palace that owes the
colossal order of pilasters and crowning
balustrade to the proposed design by Gabriel of the
Petit Trianon at
Versailles, which building was not completed until about 50 years after Easton Neston, engravings of which design were published in
Vitruvius Britannicus. Gabriel's design was itself influenced by the
palazzi on the Campidoglio in Rome by
Michelangelo (d.1564). Both main façades of Easton Neston are of simple design, devoid of ostentation. The rectangular house comprises three principal floors. The lowest is a
rusticated basement, above ground level, with the two floors above appearing to have equal value, including nine bays divided by
Composite pilasters, each bay containing a tall, slim sash window of the same height on each floor. The central bay contains the entrance, flanked by two Composite full columns. These two columns support a small, round-headed
pediment displaying the Fermor
arms and heraldic
motto. Above the door at second floor height is a massive
Venetian window. The roof-line is concealed by a
balustrade which is decorated by covered stone
urns at the ten intervals above the pilasters below. The design and fenestration of the entrance façade is repeated at the rear on the garden façade, except that the roof balustrade at the rear is undecorated by urns and pediment. The house is built of
Helmdon stone, a cream stone of exceptional quality, which has ensured that the carving appears as crisp today as it was on completion of the house in 1702. The two side elevations of the house tell the story of life in a country house before the age of the
servants' bell. Until the invention of the remote bell situated in the
servants' hall, which could be jangled by a system of
ropes and pulleys from far away, it was necessary for servants to be located within earshot of a hand-bell or call of the voice. In older houses such as
Montacute House servants slept on the floor of the
great hall or outside the door of their master's bedchamber; by the 17th century this arrangement was becoming undesirable. Houses then began to have corridors, and the owners, rather than stepping over sleeping servants, began to tidy them away in small rooms, sometimes containing their employer's
close-stool. However, these small rooms still had to be within calling distance. In a brand-new, luxurious house such as Easton Neston, this was achieved by inserting two very low-ceilinged
mezzanine staff floors between each of the two upper floors. Hence at Easton Neston, while the two principal façades (West and East) are of three floors, the fenestration of the two less important side façades betrays the secret that there are in fact five floors: the windows of the two mezzanines, as befits the humble rooms they light, are a mere half of the size of those of the grander rooms above and below them. This makes the fenestration of the side façades a complex and interesting sight. Some years after completion of the house in 1702, Hawksmoor drew-up further plans for a huge entrance court. These designs, never fully executed but published in
Vitruvius Britannicus, would have flanked the existing rectangular house with two wings, one containing stables and the other service rooms. The fourth (entrance) side of the
courtyard was to have been an elaborate
colonnade. No substantial part of this later scheme was built, except for two large and now decayed
Ozymandian entrance piers, marooned in the park. The two pre-existing red-brick wings, perhaps owing something to Christopher Wren, remained, although the western (stable) wing was later demolished after the new stables were built. Some architectural commentators, including
Dan Cruickshank feel that Hawksmoor's mansion might have been spoilt by this new scheme, which owed more to Sir
John Vanbrugh's architectural concepts than to Hawksmoor's. The whole proposed new design was depicted in
Colen Campbell's 1715 work
Vitruvius Britannicus, as though it had in fact been built. ==Interior==