WaterEnd Barn by Harvey Wyman

Harvey Wyman (wymanh60 @t btinternet.com) of Fakenham, Norfolk, writes:

Sometime in the 1930's, I think, presumably at about the time that the large barn was taken to St Albans to become the Waterend Barn Restaurant, the house was leased by the Brocket Estate as a private residence. At some time in the late 1930's the lease was taken by Colonel Walker and his wife, the Danish Countess Louise Marie Reventlow. Colonel Walker had met the Countess in Germany after WW1. He died at Waterend House in about 1948 and is buried somewhere in the grounds. The Countess, as she was known locally, then lived there until about 1957 when she went back to her estates in Denmark. Colonel Walker had owned the Rolcut Secateurs company and the Countess ran it after his death.

Colonel Bertram James Walker was born on 25 Jun 1880. He died at Wheathampstead on 8 Mar 1947. He married (2nd wife) Lucie Marie Ludovika Anastasia Adelheid Karola Hedwig comtesse Haugwitz-Hardenberg-Reventlow of Denmark on 19 Jul 1940. She was born on 24 Oct 1884 in Züllichau. She died on 20 Apr 1984.

My Father, Percival Wyman, was head gardener from 1944 until the Countess left, he stayed on as gardener to subsequent tenants the first of which was Mr Malcolm Messer who was editor of the Farmers Weekly.

The gardens had been laid out by the Gavin Jones company of Letchworth in the 1930's and were still very much in the "raw" state when my father got there in 1944. As well as about five acres of garden Dad had six Jersey cows and around fifty chickens to look after all with the help of just one German prisoner of war.

The house was built of brick with some curious very flat bricks in areas of the lower part. We were told by W Branch-Johnson the local historian that these were Roman bricks and had probably been taken from a ruined building nearby. The house is next to a ford over the River Lea on the road from St Albans so might have warranted a Roman building. Certainly Dad recollected that when they did very deep ploughing in the water meadow during WW2 any amount of broken pots in the dark red semi-glazed form seen in Verulamium museum were turned up and we used to find similar bits at odd times in the fifties.

On the top floor is a room, a servants room I guess, with an exposed beam in which the numbers "1610" had been carved. In the main bedroom there was a glass panel over the large fireplace behind which the original plaster above the fireplace had been exposed. On the plaster were a number of sets of initials in charcoal, drawn presumably from the fire, amongst which were the initials "SJ" which, we were told, stood for Sarah Jennings who subsequently became the first Duchess of Marlborough.

The cellar was a vaulted brick construction most of which was inaccessible at the time with a set of stairs obviously leading down to it in a cupboard in one of the hallways. This stair had been blanked off with concrete a few inches down.

One thing which always intrigued me was the two "wings" protruding from the rear. One side was in the same quite ornate construction as the rest of the house while the other was the same size but of a cruder construction, obviously very old but lacking the second floor window which was present in the "original" wing. Internally there was an area, a room say, behind the huge chimney stack in that area which could not be accessed, unlike the same space in the other wing which was a room accessible by a door beside the matching chimney stack.

Externally most of the barns had gone but the foundations remained as different levels in the orchard and gardens and large lawns and wide flower beds had replaced what must have been a huge farmstead.

Source: WaterEnd Barn by Wyman

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