Our History

COUNTRY HOUSE VENUE

The Landscape

Holbrook Manor lies two miles west of the market town of Wincanton in Somerset. Situated at the edge of The Blackmore Vale which borders Wiltshire and Dorset. The soil at Holbrook is clay upon rock known as Forest Mobile from the Jurassic period, Sherborne Abbey contains the only known medieval window which is cut from this material. A number of streams rise on the forest marble, and the brook, which may give Holbrook its name, goes on to join River Cale downstream from Wincanton.

Ancient Owners

Holbrook has, through the ages, evolved from a farm into a gentleman’s residence, and then finally to a Manor Hotel with Spa. The earliest known occupier of the ground is Giles Hose (1201 -02). By 1242 his successor was Reginald Hose.

1551 – 1830: The Farewell Centuries

Henry Hastings, the third Earl of Huntingdon, sold Holbrook to John Farewell in the second half of the sixteenth century. The date is uncertain, but after 1550 the Farewells were set to own Holbrook for nearly three centuries. In 1742 the Reverend Samuel Farewell was rector of Wincanton. Today’s clergy would give their eye teeth for a manse like Holbrook. In that year their son Francis was born at Holbrook. When Francis was around eight years old Samuel Farewell died and the family moved to Tiverton in Devon, where Francis was schooled at Blundells till the age of 13. At this young age he became a midshipman in the British Navy (two years after the battle of Trafalgar) and had a minor involvement in the building of The British Empire. With the Napoleonic War now over Francis Farewell was shipped off to South Africa with orders to negotiate with the world-famous Zulu Chief Chaka for the rights to trade in ivory. As part of this Francis Farewell was a founder of the Port Natal Trading Colony in 1823. He was well known locally by the native population and called Feban K Mjoji. Sadly in 1829 he was killed in a skirmish. The Port Natal Colony grew into the bustling international Port of Durban, the life of Francis Farewell and the history of Holbrook House stands tall in Wincanton, and indeed internationall

1830: General Shrapnel

Major General Henry Shrapnel was living in semi- retirement at Holbrook. He was the inventor of the fearful anti-personnel weapon using bursting charges, hence the name “shrapnel”. One can almost hear him holding forth about past battle glories, shrouded in thick cigar smoke.

1846: Barton and the Lodge

In 1846-48 Charles Barton extended Holbrook House and built the stables and the Lodge. The location of the latter, on the road side due South of the House, shows that in late Victorian times the entrance of the property, its driveway, was still from its historic location which was a little to the North West of the modern roundabout.

1903-45: The Angersteins

In 1903 the 174 acre Holbrook Estate was purchased by John Angerstein, a descendant of the Russian born Lloyds underwriter John Julius Angerstein whose collection of exceptionally important art formed the nucleus of the National Gallery.

The Holbrook library featured aspects of the family history, with the Annuals of Lloyds Registrar, a number of maps of Russia and an almost endless supply of the catalogue of Angersteins Gallery of Paintings.

 

1946 – 1998 Taylor Years

A rare illness forced Geoff and Jimmy Taylor into the country, leaving behind his position as a head buyer for the Firestone company. They fell in love with Holbrook and bought it for £7,500. Having bought the property, they decided to turn it into a hotel.

 

1998 – 2017 McGinley years

John and Pat McGinley ran the hotel successfully until it was sold to Arch Wedding Venues in November 2017.

 

Present Day

Holbrook Manor & Spa has developed into a stunning Manor house with 20 spacious bedrooms and large function suites popular with weddings. In addition attached to the Manor is The Club with indoor pool, spa bath, sauna , steam room and state of the art Gym and Hayloft Spa offering relaxing Spa days and beauty treatments.

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