Jackson-Stops developed a unique home in The
Menagerie, a
Grade II listed building at
Horton,
Northamptonshire, part of the estate buildings for the now demolished
Horton House and seat of the
Earl of Halifax. The building is a one-storey building with corner pavilions and a raised central area. The surrounding windows are by Gibbs. The work has most recently been attributed to
Thomas Wright who undertook work for Lord Halifax in the 1730s. The saving of this unusual building was Jackson-Stops's own private achievement; when he first heard of the property in 1972, he found an architectural dream; here he restored one of the finest English
Rococo plasterwork rooms, complete with Father Time, the Four Winds, and above the cornice 12 large-scale medallions of the Zodiac. Later on in the gardens he added two further follies and, with his partner Ian Kirby, created a romantic English garden which incorporated both a formal period-design an exciting modern planting. For Jackson-Stops, the Menagerie was his own country house in miniature and in the manner of a country house and in the tradition of the
fête champêtre, he hosted a succession of parties, often accompanied by the staging of operatic works. A week or so before his death he gave what would be his final party to celebrate the opening of his "shell grotto" with its suggestions of the underworld. He died of an
AIDS-related illness. The National Trust undertook the restoration of
The Chinese House at
Stowe in his memory. He features as one of the portrait chapters in ''The Englishman's Room'' (1986) by
Alvilde Lees-Milne, with photography by
Derry Moore. ==Partial list of works==