|

The development of the area now know as Catton Park was carried out
over a period of a hundred years from the 1770s onwards and was the work
of successive owners of the Catton Hall estate of which it formed a part.
Although Catton Hall is no longer in the same ownership as Catton Park,
the history of the two is inextricably linked as that of a mansion in a
parkland setting.
The Catton Hall estate was not unusual in being formed as a place of
occasional
residence for the business elite of the city, and Norwich had, by the
late 18th
century, a ring of such residences1.
Many of these were a 'house in the country'
with up to ten acres of grounds, whilst others like Catton Hall had
larger grounds
which allowed for that most desirable of landscape features - a park.
So important was the park to the owners of Catton Hall that it was
enlarged
twice, firstly in 1788 and again in 1856, by diverting public roads, a
costly
business not lightly undertaken. However the Catton Hall estate
differed from
most of the businessmen's residences with parks, in that it also included
a
larger agricultural acreage than was usual for estates of this type.
In 1835 it amounted in total to some 600 acres and extended into the
adjoining
parishes to the west and east of Catton. The ownership of this land
enabled
the second park enlargements to proceed without the problem of the
acquisition of additional land.
__________________________________________
1 W Faden A New topographical map of the county of
Norfolk 1797
Page 1 of 9
Next page » |