architecture, eyecatcher, Fictional Follies, Folly, garden history, hermitage, sham castle, Tower

Follyphilia.

In November 1960, The Queen magazine published a special issue that asked the question ‘What’s so different about the British?’ Amongst the contributors were Norman Parkinson on ‘British Clothes’, Ambrose Heath on the British and cooking and Laurie Lee on the village of Slad. And what could be more British than follies, the subject discussed by Nicholas Guppy, and illustrated in wildly extravagant fashion by cartoonist ffolkes.

Guppy (1925-2012), writer, environmentalist and explorer, thought that ‘follies suit the British temperament’. He elaborated that there is ‘something light-hearted, whimsical and above all disorderly about many of them’ and concluded that they are ‘manifestations of eccentricity, and of rebellion’. Guppy’s article was entitled Follyphilia, the word he coined to describe those with an affectionate regard for such structures.

Some follies, thought Guppy, were built as ripostes to the ‘smug world of columned Palladianism’, (and he pointedly excluded classical garden ornaments from his article). His examples of such ‘crudely-made though often costly buildings’ included St David’s Ruin in Yorkshire, Dunstall Castle in Worcestershire and Arnos Castle near Bristol (pictured top in 1972).

Dunstall Castle on the Croome Estate in Worcestershire as it looked in 1966. A sham fortification, designed by Robert Adam, and built as an eye-catcher in 1766.

‘…a crumbling edifice on the horizon’, he wrote, ‘inspired awesome thoughts about the vanity of earthly ambition, etc., or at least a fashionably genteel melancholy’.

The Druid’s Temple on the Swinton estate in North Yorkshire as seen in 1967. The sham druidical monument was built as a landscape feature in the early years of the 19th century.

Follies could provide an imaginary link with ‘a more heroic past’ in the form of a false-fronted cottage, a sham castle or abbey, a tower, or even an entire faux-druidical temple, such as the one near Masham in Yorkshire.

Then there were the towers that just soared higher and higher, often in a bid to outbuild the competition or to announce great wealth and position. Or, in the case of the one at Sway, to test the future of reinforced concrete in building towers.

The tower at Sway in Hampshire in 1972. It was erected by Judge Petersen, supposedly guided by the ghost of Sir Christopher Wren, to experiment with using reinforced concrete to build to a great height.

Dank caves and subterranean passages like Sir Francis Dashwood’s at West Wycombe were too ‘curiously horrid’ for Guppy’s liking, but he did appreciate ‘gay affairs of glittering crystal-spar, of pearly shells and patterned pebbles’ such as the Shell House at Goodwood. Reaffirming his distaste for the Greco-Roman garden ornament he found the grotto at Stourhead ‘too classical’.

But for Guppy the ‘ultimate folly was the hermitage’, combining as it did the ‘picturesque features of a ruin and a grotto, the utmost eccentricity of building materials’ with a human inhabitant. Guppy gives the rustic shelter known as the Sanctuary of Hermit Finch at Burley-on-the-Hill, in Rutland, as his example, but sadly this folly was destroyed by fire in 1965, only a few years after this article was published.

Hermit Finch’s Sanctuary. A rustic hermitage in the pleasure grounds of Burley-on-the Hill in Rutland. Photo taken in 1955.

The main image accompanying the article is of a structure that is unlikely to have ever graced a landscape. The cartoonist Michael ffolkes (1925-1988), conjured up a wonderful tower featuring elements of just about every British folly ever built (and a bowler-hatted Brit enjoying the view).

The article is illustrated with small black and white photographs of the follies, and no photographer is credited, so the Flâneuse has chosen to illustrate this post with better quality images of the same follies. All are roughly contemporary with the article, and all are from the Neville and William Hawkes Collection. Neville and William, father and son, were both architects and follyphiliacs, and Neville (1910-1988) took the views shown here at much the same time as Guppy was writing this article.

The Hawkes family donated the photographic archive to the Folly Fellowship, the charity which aims to to protect, preserve, and promote follies, grottoes & garden buildings, and the photographs are reproduced here by kind permission.

Dunstall Castle is in the park at Croome, a National Trust property; the Druid’s Temple on the Swinton estate is freely accessible as is Arnos Castle on the edge of Bristol. The tower at Sway is private, but can be seen from miles around.

If you find the folly illustrated by ffolkes please get in touch.

Thank you for reading. The Flâneuse is always delighted to learn more, or to hear your thoughts, so please scroll down to the comments box to get in touch. 

 

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7 thoughts on “Follyphilia.”

  1. Sarah Baylis says:

    I have a childhood memory (1960s) of being told about a resident ‘ hermit’ called ‘Mr Bennett’ who lived in the grounds of Burley … perhaps the root of my own follyphilia. Would love to know if it was a true story ..

    1. Editor says:

      Hello Sarah. I didn’t have space here to go into all the stories associated with the hermitage. I will revisit when I find time and will note your memories, thanks.

  2. Claire Terrill says:

    I want ffolke’s tower in my garden!

    1. Editor says:

      Well, Claire, I’m sure Alan is looking for a summer project…

    2. Sally Paque says:

      I’m sure you could knit one for starters, Claire!

  3. TOM GARDNER says:

    TOM (NYC)
    IT’S ALWAYS A PLEASURE WHEN YOUR ‘HANDLE’ APPEARS ON MY ‘INBOX’.
    YOU NEVER DISAPPOINT WITH YOUR OFFERINGS.
    THIS LAST PRESENTATION ONLY PROVES THE SCOPE OF THE HUMAN’S LOVE
    OF THE PAST; AND ITS ATTEMPT TO – PERHAPS, CAPTURE THAT ‘MAGIC’.

    1. Editor says:

      Thank you, Tom. It is good to know there is at least one follyphiliac in NYC.

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