Arundells

for the prominent Cornish family see Arundell family
Arundells

View of front of Arundells from the Close
General information
Type House and garden
Address 59 Cathedral Close, Salisbury SP1 2EN, Wiltshire, England
Owner Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation
Designations Grade II* listed
Website
www.arundells.org

Arundells is a Grade II* listed house at 59 Cathedral Close, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.[1] Located on the West Walk of the Close, next to the 'Wardrobe' (Rifles Museum), it was the home of Edward Heath, the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, from 1985 until his death in 2005.

The house and its extensive garden are open to the public five days a week from late March to late October each year (it is closed on Thursdays and Fridays).[2] Visitors can pre-book timed tours of Arundells on its official website - www.arundells.org - or gain access on the door whenever tours are not full.[3]

History of the house

Arundells has its origins as a Medieval canonry in the thirteenth century and its first recorded occupant was Henry of Blunston, Archdeacon of Dorset, who was resident from 1291 to 1316. Many other canons lived there up to Leonard Bilson, who was imprisoned in 1571 for practising sorcery and magic. The house was then leased by the Cathedral Chapter to a series of lay tenants, including Sir Richard Mompesson (from 1609) and John Wyndham (1718); the latter rebuilt a large part of the property in the classic style of the day. Wyndham gave the house to his daughter, who married the sixth Lord Arundel of Wardour in 1752, resulting in the house acquiring its current name.[1] They occasionally accommodated Jesuit priests in the loft, which was divided into small cells. Arundells housed Godolphin Girls' School and a boys' boarding school at different times in the 19th century, with Godolphin's, which is still located in Salisbury, moving from Arundells after an outbreak of cholera in the city.

During the Second World War, Arundells was used as a book and wool store by the Red Cross.[4] It fell into serious disrepair after the war and the Cathedral Chapter, responsible for the Close, considered demolishing it, before the leasehold was purchased for a token amount by Mr and Mrs Robert Hawkings in 1964, and the property was subsequently renovated. In 1985, at the age of 69, the former British Prime Minister, Sir Edward Heath, bought Arundells, partly because of its proximity to the Solent, where he sailed. He engaged the renowned interior designer, Derek Frost, whose brief was to modernise the house in a contemporary fashion while paying respect to the Queen Anne original.

Derek Frost designed display cabinets to house Sir Edward's many trophies and awards. He also designed a number of custom pieces of furniture for the house that remain there to this day. It was the first time in his life that Sir Edward had owned a property. (Heath had been Prime Minister from June 1970 to March 1974, and remained a Member of Parliament until 2001, as the Father of the House at Westminster). In 1993, he added the freehold to the lease, purchasing it from Salisbury Cathedral, when the latter was seeking to raise money for its restoration programme. (Heath was an active supporter of the cathedral's 'Spire Appeal'.) Following Heath's death in July 2005, his estate was bequeathed to the Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation, established under his will, with the express purpose of ensuring that the house and its contents could be opened to the public as a place of historic interest.[5]

Opening of the house

The ground-floor rooms at Arundells were opened to the public in 2008 and received about 50,000 visitors in the first six years to 2013. In spring 2014, the trustees opened some of the first-floor rooms for the first time, including Heath's study, where he worked at a desk which originally belonged to an earlier Prime Minister, David Lloyd George. The exhibits on the first floor now include political and other memorabilia, such as Heath's ministerial boxes and personal banner from the Order of the Garter. The staircase is decorated by hand-painted Chinese wallpaper depicting classic legends.[6] Heath's former political secretary, Douglas Hurd, was guest of honour at the formal opening of the study in summer 2014.[7]

The former Labour cabinet minister, Tony Benn, was despite his political views a close friend of Heath and an early supporter of efforts to ensure the permanent opening of the house, saying "I know the house, I knew Ted ... and visited him there after he retired from politics.”[8] Subsequently, a large number of political figures, on an all-party basis - including Geoffrey Howe, David Hunt, Kenneth Clarke, Peter Mandelson, Hilary Benn, Charles Kennedy and Alan Beith, as well as Douglas Hurd - have expressed public support for the house being permanently open to the public, including the necessary planning permissions for this purpose.

The former Labour Chancellor and Home Secretary, Roy Jenkins, who was a lifelong friend of Heath, dating from their time together as students at Balliol College, Oxford, is said to have looked out towards Salisbury Cathedral from the front guest bedroom of Arundells and remarked that the view was one of the ten finest in the country, to which Heath replied: "Why, what are the other nine?"[9]

Arundells is currently open to the public five days a week from late March to late October each year, being closed on Thursdays and Fridays. In addition to its public opening days, the property regularly hosts private events, including recitals and seminars.[10] Visitors can pre-book timed tours (of up to twelve persons) on the Arundells official website or gain access on the door if tours are not full. A tour of the house takes about an hour. Guides include Stuart Craven, who used to work for Heath and who now manages the property for the Charitable Foundation.

Arundells' art and other collections

The house contains a varied and unique collection of artefacts reflecting Heath's time in public life, his passion for art, and his notable achievements in music and sailing. There is a large range of paintings, drawings, prints, European and Oriental ceramics, sailing memorabilia and political mementos, including:[11]

Among the paintings and prints by over 20 artists on display are 'Yachts at Sea' by L. S. Lowry; 'Between Aix and Arles' and 'Mimizan' by Sir Winston Churchill, both given to Heath by the artist in the 1950s, one of which is unique in being signed 'WSC' twice; a series of scenes by John Piper, including two views of Arundells itself; three paintings by John Singer Sargent; one each by Augustus John, Walter Sickert and Ken Howard, and an impressive collection of Japanese woodblock prints by Utamaro and Hiroshi Yoshida, including the latter's well-known 'Inland Sea series', six seascapes of the same scene at different times in the day. A painting of Heath's home-town of Broadstairs in Kent by Robert Ponsonby-Staples was given to him by the Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman[13]

Charitable Trust

Arundells is owned and managed by the Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation, established under Heath's will, whose acting chairman is Wilf Weeks, who served as political secretary to Heath in the 1970s. David Hunt, a prominent young supporter of Heath in the 1970s and subsequently a Cabinet minister under John Major, is the chairman-designate (see above).

When Heath died in 2005, his estate was valued at £5 million and the Foundation opened Arundells to the public in 2008, initially for a three-year period.[14] Although the property has since received around 60,000 visitors, the trustees found it difficult to make the property self-financing, as they wished, and concluded in September 2010 that they would prefer to sell the house and its contents, at the end of the three-year period, and to allocate the proceeds to other charitable causes, notably music, rather than continue with existing arrangements.[15] However, active grass-roots opposition from local supporters of the house, led by the 'Friends of Arundells', prompted the Charity Commission to rule in September 2011 that any sale would be premature, with the Foundation asked to make more vigorous efforts to meet the central objective of Heath's will.[16] The trustees continued to argue for a sale, and although they opened the property for the 2012 season, they announced their continued wish to sell it thereafter, if the Charity Commission would permit them to do so.[17]

The developing impasse was broken in December 2012, when a group of former political advisers to Heath and to other leading Conservative figures (from the Heath, Thatcher and Major governments), led by Heath's former political secretary in the 1980s, Peter Batey, intervened in the dispute to offer a potential compromise, whereby funding would be provided to cover any operating deficit in the near-term, whilst improvements in the management of the property were undertaken, planning permission was secured from Wiltshire Council to allow the house and garden to be open on a permanent basis (rather than on a three-year rolling basis), and a longer-term fund-raising process was undertaken to guarantee the fabric of the property and allow Arundells to become a centre for charitable activity related to Heath's interests. (The issue of planning permission was important because the Cathedral Chapter objected to it,[16] claiming that the continued opening of the house "might change the character of the area" by "reinforcing the element of commerciality", but their objections were rejected by Wiltshire Council).

The Batey proposal was accepted by the Foundation in November 2013, with a view to Arundells remaining permanently open to the public, and Mr Batey was appointed as a trustee. With permanent planning permission granted soon thereafter, some of the first-floor rooms of the house, including Heath's study, were opened to the public in 2014 (see above).

The official Arundells website, maintained by the Charitable Trust, includes a selection of interesting video and audio links relating to Heath's life and career, including the 2011 BBC television documentary, 'Wilson versus Heath: The Ten-Year Dual', which traces the defining political rivalry between the leaders of the two main British political parties which ran between July 1965 and February 1975.[18]

References

External links

Coordinates: 51°03′57″N 1°48′00″W / 51.0659°N 1.7999°W / 51.0659; -1.7999

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