, West Sussex, England Most typically, ha-has are still found in the grounds of large country houses and estates. They keep cattle and sheep out of the formal gardens, without the need for obtrusive fencing. They vary in depth from about (
Horton House) to (
Petworth House).
Beningbrough Hall in
Yorkshire is separated from its extensive grounds by a ha-ha to prevent sheep and cattle from entering the Hall's gardens or the Hall itself. An unusually long example is the ha-ha that separates the
Royal Artillery Barracks Field from
Woolwich Common in southeast
London. This deep ha-ha was installed around 1774 to prevent sheep and cattle, grazing at a stopover on Woolwich Common on their journey to the London meat markets, from wandering onto the Royal Artillery gunnery range. A rare feature of this east-west ha-ha is that the normally hidden brick wall emerges above ground for its final 75 yards (70 metres) or so as the land falls away to the west, revealing a fine
batter to the brickwork face of the wall, thus exposed. This final west section of the ha-ha forms the boundary of the Gatehouse by
James Wyatt RA. The Royal Artillery ha-ha is maintained in a good state of preservation by the
Ministry of Defence. It is a
Listed Building, and is accompanied by Ha-Ha Road that runs alongside its full length. There is a shorter ha-ha in the grounds of the nearby
Jacobean Charlton House. The
Royal Crescent row of 30
terraced houses in
Bath, Somerset, which were built between 1767 and 1774 in the
Georgian architecture style, also feature a large ha-ha that provides an uninterrupted view of
Royal Victoria Park. In Australia, ha-has were also used at Victorian-era lunatic asylums such as
Yarra Bend Asylum,
Beechworth Asylum, and
Kew Lunatic Asylum in Victoria, and the
Parkside Lunatic Asylum in South Australia. From the inside, the walls presented a tall face to patients, preventing them from escaping, while from outside they looked low so as not to suggest imprisonment. For the patients themselves, standing before the trench, it also enabled them to see the wider landscape.
Kew Asylum has been redeveloped as apartments; however some of the ha-has remain, albeit partially filled in. File:Beechworth Ha Ha from outside.JPG|Remains of the original ha-ha wall at Beechworth Asylum from the "outside" of the original asylum boundary File:Beechworth ha-ha inside 2.JPG|From the inside, the ha-ha was a barrier to passage. File:Beechworth ha-ha inside 1.JPG|End view at the beginning of the remains of the ha-ha at Beechworth Asylum, showing the sloping trench File:Yarrabendhaha.jpg|An example of the ha-ha variation used at
Yarra Bend Asylum in
Victoria, Australia, circa 1900 Ha-has were also used in North America. Only two historic installations remain in Canada, one of which is on the grounds of Nova Scotia's Uniacke House (1813), a rural estate built by
Richard John Uniacke, an Irish-born Attorney-General of Nova Scotia.
Mount Vernon, the plantation of
George Washington, incorporates ha-has on its
grounds as part of the landscaping for the mansion built by George Washington’s father, Augustine Washington. A later American president,
Thomas Jefferson, "built a ha-ha at the southern end of the South Lawn [of the White House], which was an eight-foot wall with a sunken ditch meant to keep the livestock from grazing in his garden." is protected by a low ha-ha wall. A 21st-century use of a ha-ha is at the
Washington Monument to minimise the visual impact of security measures. After
9/11 and another unrelated terror threat at the monument, authorities put up
jersey barriers to prevent large motor vehicles from approaching the monument. The temporary barriers were later replaced with a new ha-ha, a low 0.76 m (30-inch) granite stone wall that incorporated lighting and doubled as a seating bench. It received the 2005 Park/Landscape Award of Merit.
In fiction • In Jane Austen's
Mansfield Park (1814), a ha-ha prevents the more sensible characters from getting around a locked gate and into the woodland beyond. • In Anthony Trollope's
Barchester Towers (1857), a ha-ha marks the social divisions in Miss Thorne's
fête champêtre: "Two marquees had been erected for these two banquets: that for the quality on the esoteric or garden side of a certain deep ha-ha; and that for the non-quality on the exoteric or paddock side of the same." • In
J.J. Connington's 's 1934
detective novel The Ha-Ha Case a murder is committed in a ha-ha during a
shooting party. • In
Tom Stoppard's 1993 play
Arcadia, the obnoxious university professor Bernard Nightingale discusses his theory of how the word is pronounced and notes that in France ‘ha-ha’ is used "to denote a strikingly ugly woman.” Later, author Hannah Jarvis describes how the "best box hedge in Derbyshire" was dug up and ruined by
Capability Brown and replaced with a ha-ha so that "the fools could pretend they were living in God’s countryside.” • In
Terry Pratchett's
Men at Arms, the grounds of the Patrician's Palace, created by the infamous Bloody Stupid Johnson, includes a ho-ho, which is described as like a ha-ha only much deeper. In the later book
Snuff, the grounds of the Ramkins' county estate have a both a ho-ho
and a ha-ha, as well as a he-he and a ho-hum, implied to be much shallower. == Legal ==