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Monument details

HER Number:TQ 75 SE 341
Type of record:Landscape
Name:Mote Park, 18th-19th Century landscape

Summary

An 18th and 19th-century landscape park created from an earlier deer park, set at the east edge of Maidstone. The park surrounds a 1790s country house with informal, mid-19th-century pleasure grounds. The earthwork remains of an earlier formal garden of the early to mid-18th century, related to the site of the former mansion, lie within the park.


Grid Reference:TQ 5779e 1548e
Map Sheet:TQ51NE
Parish:MAIDSTONE, MAIDSTONE, KENT

Monument Types

  • LANDSCAPE PARK (Post Medieval to Modern - 1800 AD? to 2010 AD)
Protected Status:Historic Park or Garden 315: Turkey Court, Maidstone; Registered Park or Garden (II) 1001481: MOTE PARK; Historic Park or Garden 196: Mote Park, Maidstone

Full description

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An 18th and 19th-century landscape park created from an earlier deer park, set at the east edge of Maidstone. The park surrounds a 1790s country house with informal, mid-19th-century pleasure grounds. The earthwork remains of an earlier formal garden of the early to mid-18th century, related to the site of the former mansion, lie within the park (TQ 75 SE 338).

The second Baron died in 1793, and his son, the third Baron (created first Earl of Romney, 1801), at once began to erect a new mansion on higher ground to the north-east of the park. The park itself was extended and new drives were laid out. The old mansion was demolished in about 1800. Estate accounts for the period 1793 to 1802 show that over £1,900 was spent on the kitchen garden, park wall, the Great Bridge over the lake, and boathouse. The first Earl died in 1811 leaving large debts.

By 1835 the estate was cleared of debt, and a further phase of landscape improvement began in about 1839 at the behest of the second Earl (died 1845), following the acquisition of further land. The alterations included the extension and enlargement of the lake, the demolition of the Great Bridge, and the realignment of the principal approach from Maidstone.

In 1895 the estate was sold out of the family to Sir Marcus Samuel (later first Viscount Bearstead) and, following the death of his father in 1927, the second Viscount sold the park to Maidstone Corporation. Mote Park was opened to the public, and the mansion was used first as a school, then during the Second World War by the army, and most recently as a Leonard Cheshire Home. The park remains (2010) in use as a public amenity and the mansion is unoccupied. (1)


Parks and Gardens Data Services Limited (PGDS), 2005, Parks and Gardens UK (www.parksandgardens.org) (Website). SKE16061.

Maidstone Borough Council, 2008, Mote Park, Maidstone (Unpublished document). SKE16008.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
---Unpublished document: Maidstone Borough Council. 2008. Mote Park, Maidstone.
---Website: Parks and Gardens Data Services Limited (PGDS). 2005. Parks and Gardens UK (www.parksandgardens.org).

Related records

TQ 75 SE 288Part of: MOTE HOUSE (Listed Building)