Wormsley Park

Wormsley is a private estate of Mark Getty and his family, set in 2,700-acre (1,100 ha) of rolling countryside in the Chiltern Hills of Buckinghamshire, England. Acquired by Sir Paul Getty in 1985, the estate forms part of Hambleden valley, running from Stokenchurch to Turville. Wormsley is known for its library, its cricket ground, its two-acre walled garden, its shoot, and the vistas and landscapes of the estate grounds. It rents space for events and television and filming work, and has also been home to Garsington Opera.

Wormsley

History

The estate was founded by the Scrope family in the late 16th century. It belonged to Colonel Adrian Scrope, the regicide, and passed to his grandson John Scrope, a baron of the Exchequer who died without issue. The estate passed to the descendants of his sister Anne (died 1720), who had married Henry Fane of Brympton. Their second son, Thomas Fane, also a Bristol merchant, succeeded his uncle as Member of Parliament for Lyme Regis, beginning the Fane family's long association with the seat. Fane also succeeded a distant cousin and became 8th Earl of Westmoreland in 1762.

The Fane family sold the 18th-century house house and estate in 1986 to Sir Paul Getty and his wife Victoria Holdsworth. Getty restored the house and estate, adding a library to accommodate his book collection, and a theatre where performances were held for invited guests. Garsington Opera holds its annual summer festival on the grounds of the park.[1]

The area is known for its population of red kites. Once extinct in England and Scotland, the birds were reintroduced into England beginning in 1989. The area was not originally planned to be the first release site. It was originally intended to be Windsor Great Park, but at the last minute the landowner pulled out and the project nearly collapsed. Getty stepped in and offered Wormsley as an alternative.

In 2011, Garsington Opera moved from Garsington Manor near Oxford to a purpose-built pavilion in the grounds of Wormsley.

Cricket ground

Sir Paul Getty's Ground
Ground information
Locationnear Stokenchurch, Buckinghamshire
Establishment1992 (first recorded match)
International information
First women's Test11–15 August 2013:
 England v  Australia
Last women's Test13–17 August 2014:
 England v  India
First WODI5 July 2009:
 England v  Australia
Last WODI11 July 2012:
 England v  India
Team information
Unicorns (2010present)
Buckinghamshire (1999–2005)
As of 5 September 2020
Source: cricketarchive.com

After Mick Jagger introduced him to cricket, Getty built a ground in 1992 with a mock-Tudor pavilion. The Queen Mother and the Prime Minister, John Major, attended the first match, along with Michael Caine, Denis Compton and Brian Johnston. Over the final decade of his life, Getty invited teams to play at what is now known as "Sir Paul Getty's Ground" with the teams ranging from world-class sides to youth sides.

Those who have played there include cricketers Andrew Flintoff, Imran Khan, Mike Gatting, Mike Atherton, Mark Ramprakash, Derek Randall, and Mike Brearley and entertainment figures such as Peter O'Toole, Tim Rice, and Rory Bremner. Touring international sides have played at Wormsley with the Australians, West Indians, Sri Lankans and South Africans all having made appearances at the ground.[2] It was the venue for the only Test match of the Australian women's tour of England in 2013.[3]

References

  1. Christiansen, Rupert (2 November 2010). "Garsington gears up for glorious pastures new". The Daily Telegraph.
  2. "About Wormsley". Wormsley Cricket. Archived from the original on 2011-04-23. Retrieved 2011-03-29.
  3. Stephan Shemilt. "Women's Ashes 2013: New format, new era for England". BBC Sport. Retrieved 4 October 2015.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.