'', pencil drawing, 1911, by Sir
William Rothenstein (Owlpen Manor Collection) Towards the end of the 19th century, the old manor became an icon of the
Arts and Crafts movement. It was described by contemporary writers such as
Henry Avray Tipping,
Christopher Hussey and the poet
Algernon Charles Swinburne as an 'incomparable paradise', set in its remote valley as a
Sleeping Beauty uninhabited for nearly a hundred years, a picturesque ruin, much decayed and overrun with ivy, and dwarfed by enormous
yew trees. After the First World War, there was concern for its survival and the
Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings recommended that it should be vested in the
National Trust, which however had no funds available for its repair. Finally, in 1924–25, the Owlpen estate was sold for the first time in nearly one thousand years. The future of the manor house was assured when it was acquired and repaired by
Norman Jewson, a Cotswold
Arts and Crafts movement architect who had worked with
Ernest Gimson and the brothers Sidney and Ernest Barnsley (who was his father-in-law) in
Sapperton. In 1930, his friend, the artist
F. L. Griggs dedicated his etching of
Owlpen Manor to Jewson, who had 'saved this ancient house from ruin'. Jewson has documented his repair work in his classic memoir,
By Chance I did Rove (1951, twice reprinted). Owlpen Manor was designated by
Historic England as a grade I
listed building on 23 June 1952. ==Owlpen today==