
Nestled in the tranquil village of Crawley Down in the heart of the West Sussex countryside, this magnificent six-bedroom house forms the westerly wing of a 19th-century country estate. It was built in the 1860s by local barrister James Harrison and retains many of its original features, including exquisitely detailed external stonework, original tiling and incredibly ornate Arts and Crafts fretwork. This 5,000 sq ft home extends over three storeys, and there is an additional outbuilding with potential to transform into an annexe. Around 1.6 acres of gardens surround the house, which sits close to the High Weald and South Downs Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Despite its rural idyll, the house is well connected: a nearby rail station at Three Bridges provides services to London Bridge in 35 minutes, and Gatwick airport is a 10-minute drive away.
Setting the Scene
Down Park mansion was built in the 1860s on the site of what was previously known as Shepherd’s Hole Farm, as a home for local barrister James Harrison – who later became MP for Kilmarnock Burghs. While retaining the farm, Harrison built what was known as a complete gentleman’s estate on the land, comprising ornamental and kitchen gardens, boating ponds, lodges, coach houses and stables, as well as the mansion itself. The house later housed soldiers during WWI; an Anderson shelter is still in place in the garden, and diamond-shaped markings can still be seen on some windows, an echo of the tape used to protect the original glazing.
Graceful arched windows and ornate brickwork are key features in this house’s elegant exterior, and wisteria delicately embraces the west side of the house. The house as a whole was sympathetically divided in the 1950s and now comprises three residences, of which this is the primary portion, with grounds of 1.6 acres for sole use of this home. Remarkably, given its storied past, the house remains unlisted. In more recent years, it has been featured as inspiration on George Clarke’s ‘Old House, New Home’, published in 25 Beautiful Homes and Homes & Antiques magazines and described in ‘Victorian Modern: A Design Bible for the Modern Home’ by Jo Leevers.
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