Euston first appears in the
Domesday Book in 1086 as a manor belonging to
Bury St. Edmunds Abbey. In August 1578,
Elizabeth I stayed at the manor hall with the Rookwood family on her way to
Norwich. The owner was a
recusant and during the royal visit an image of the Virgin Mary was discovered hidden in a hay rick. The estate, in near ruin, was purchased in 1666 by Henry Bennet,
Earl of Arlington and Secretary of State to the newly restored King,
Charles II. He constructed a grand house in the French style, built around a central court with large pavilions on each corner. Charles II paid the first of several visits to Euston in 1671.
John Evelyn, the diarist, was amongst the large court that accompanied the King. In 1672 Charles II arranged a marriage between nine-year-old
Henry FitzRoy, his illegitimate son by
Barbara Villiers, and Isabella Bennet, the Earl of Arlington's five-year-old heiress. FitzRoy was created 1st
Duke of Grafton in 1675, and the young couple went through a second wedding ceremony in 1679 when Isabella had reached the age of twelve, then the minimum legal age to marry with consent. The Duke and Duchess inherited Euston Hall in 1685. In about 1750 their son, the second Duke, decided to re-model the house and employed
Matthew Brettingham, who supervised the execution of
William Kent's and
Lord Burlington's design of
Holkham Hall in
Norfolk. The domes at Euston were replaced by the low pyramid roofs seen today, and part of the house was refaced. On 5 April 1902, a disastrous fire destroyed the south and west wings and the fine Verrio ceilings. The house was soon rebuilt on the same plan, but later the south wing, and most of the west wing, were pulled down by the
10th Duke in 1952. Euston Hall has a fine art collection, but one
Canaletto deserves special mention. According to the
Sporting Magazine, February 1793: "About the year 1735 he [the 2nd Duke of Grafton] kept foxhounds at Croydon and went to London very early on the days he hunted. The old Duke used to complain bitterly of the interruption he met with (in crossing the Thames at Westminster) for the delay and inattention of the ferry man, etc., by which he often lost several hours of a fine morning before he arrived in Croydon. To remove this inconvenience he projected a
bridge at Westminster, and brought a bill into Parliament for its erection, which was completed in the year 1748." For many years there hung at Euston Hall a contemporary Canaletto of the bridge being built. The estate gives its name to
Euston railway station, the dukes having owned the land in the area where the station was built and promoted its development. ==The Park==