Silverton Park was built by
George Wyndham, a British naval officer who retired from the service in 1825. In 1837, his uncle,
George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont died, leaving only illegitimate children; George therefore inherited the Egremont title, although the Egremont seat of
Petworth House in Sussex and the ancestral wealth passed to the 3rd Earl's eldest son. George set about building a grand mansion in 1838 using the architect
James Thomas Knowles. At the core of the new building was an older house called Combesatchfield, which Knowles surrounded with classical features, constructed in brick with a render of patented, metallic cement. A frieze depicting the
Exodus of the Israelites into Egypt was sculpted on the external cornice. The interior was richly furnished. A classical stable block was built alongside the house. George borrowed heavily and increased rents to pay for the hugely expensive project and died, heavily in debt, in 1845. ==Destruction and later use==