'' by
Antonio Bellucci – ceiling painting in Great Witley Church, the former Chapel of the House
16th-18th centuries The earliest building on the site was a
Jacobean brick house constructed by the Russell family. After the
Civil War the house was sold to
Thomas Foley (1616-1677), an
ironmaster. He erected two towers on the north side of the house and his grandson
Thomas Foley, 1st Baron Foley (1716–1777) added the wings which enclose the entrance courtyard. In 1735 the
Thomas Foley, 2nd Baron Foley (1742–1793) constructed a new parish church to the west of this courtyard, an undertaking begun by his father. The church was given a
baroque interior in 1747, when he commissioned
James Gibbs to incorporate paintings and furnishings acquired at the auction of the contents of
Cannons House. Once reconstructed, the Church interior included painted panels by
Antonio Bellucci, and ten hand painted windows by Joshua Price of London, based on the designs of Francesco Slater. In the second half of the 18th century the park was landscaped. This included the relocation of the village of Great Witley, which came too close to the south front (rear) of the house. In about 1805
Thomas Foley, 3rd Baron Foley (1780–1833) employed
John Nash to carry out a major reconstruction of the house, including the addition of huge
ionic porticoes to the north and south fronts.
19th century In 1837 serious debt forced
Thomas Foley, 4th Baron Foley (1808–1869) to sell the estate to the trustees of
William Ward, 11th Baron Ward (1817–1885, later
1st Earl of Dudley), who had inherited a great fortune from the coal and iron industries in the
Black Country. From 1843 to 1846 Witley Court was loaned to Queen
Adelaide, the widow of King
William IV. Whilst at Witley Court she had two chaplains – John Ryle Wood, Canon of Worcester and Thomas Pearson,
Rector of Great Witley. In the 1850s, Lord Ward engaged the architect
Samuel Daukes, who had already altered his London house,
Dudley House on
Park Lane and the church at Great Witley, to remodel the house in
Italianate style using
ashlar stone cladding over the existing red brickwork. He also commissioned the garden designer
William Andrews Nesfield to transform the gardens. In 1885 Lord Dudley died and his son
William Humble Ward, 2nd Earl of Dudley (1867–1932) inherited the property. His wife was
Rachel Ward, Countess of Dudley (née Rachel Gurney).
20th–21st centuries In 1920 Witley Court was sold by the 2nd Earl to
Sir Herbert Smith, 1st Baronet, a
Kidderminster carpet manufacturer. Sir Herbert maintained only a skeleton staff to manage the house whilst he and his family were away, and many areas were left unused. A major accidental fire broke out in September 1937, whilst Sir Herbert was at another of his houses. It started in the bakery situated in the basement room of the now least preserved tower. The staff tried to put the fire out with the ancient fire pump, which was connected to the fountain, but it failed to work as it had not been maintained for many years. Although only one wing of the house was gutted by the fire and the rest of it was almost intact, the insurance company declined to cover the major damage, so Sir Herbert resolved to sell the property. The estate was broken up and sold in lots. The house was bought by scrap dealers who stripped what they could from the house, leaving it an empty shell. In 1972 the remnants of the house and garden (excluding the church) were taken into care by the government, via a compulsory guardianship order. The ruins today are still spectacular, and the property is in the care of
English Heritage. A video made in 1967 by the band
Procol Harum for their song "
A Whiter Shade of Pale", used Witley Court as the location. At this time the site was completely derelict.
Saint Michael and All Angels Church, which is attached to the ruins, survived the fire. In 2003 Witley Court's owners, the Wigington family of Stratford-upon-Avon, who had acquired it in 1953 for £20,000, placed the
freehold for sale on
eBay for £975,000. The management arrangement with English Heritage was to remain unchanged. The sale was re-launched 2008 and Witley was sold for less than £900,000. The ruins were featured prominently in the 2016 British TV miniseries
Close to the Enemy. ==Architecture==