Compton Verney


Compton Verney is a parish and historic manor in the county of Warwickshire, England. The population taken at the 2011 census was 119. The surviving manor house is the Georgian mansion Compton Verney House.

Descent of the manor

The first record of a settlement at Compton Verney was the late Saxon manor of Compton, meaning "settlement in a valley". It had good communications, being served by the Fosse Way, which runs north–south half a mile from the site and led originally from the Roman settlements of Cirencester to Leicester. The Domesday Book of 1086 lists Compton as two manors, the largest of which was among the many holdings of Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan, one of the few proven companions of William the Conqueror who fought at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. It descended to his younger brother Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick who granted the church as a prebend to support one canon of the Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick. The donation was confirmed by Walter Durdent Bishop of Coventry from 1149 to 1159 and again twice by Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick, in 1291 and 1310.
The village was demolished before the time of the historian John Rous , as William Dugdale notes in his Antiquities of Warwickshire :

Murdac

At some time before 1150 the manor was granted to Robert Murdac when it became known as Compton Murdak, and was inherited by his descendants and thence to the heirs of the Murdak family. In 1370, after two hundred years of ownership by his family, Sir Thomas Murdak surrendered the estate to Alice Perrers, mistress of King Edward III.

Verney

In about 1441 it was acquired by Richard Verney with the assistance of his younger brother John Verney, Dean of Lichfield, formerly Rector of Bredon in Worcestershire, and supervisor and receiver-general to Richard Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick. The Verney family had begun acquiring lands in the area surrounding Compton Murdak in the 1430s before purchasing the estate. In about 1500 the manor became known as Compton Verney. According to William Dugdale in his Antiquities of Warwickshire a new manor house was built in about 1442:

of old Compton Verney House
The Manor House was extended by succeeding generations as the family's fortune expanded. In 1695 Richard Verney established his claim to the Barony of Willoughby de Broke before the House of Lords, following the early death of his fifteen-year-old great-nephew William Verney, 10th Baron Willoughby de Broke, only male descendant of his elder brother Greville Verney, 8th Baron Willoughby de Broke, and moved from his Rutland estate to live at Compton Verney. His son George Verney, 12th Baron Willoughby de Broke rebuilt the house and landscaped the gardens in the early 18th century. John Peyto-Verney, 14th Baron Willoughby de Broke completely remodelled the house to the design of Robert Adam and the grounds to the design of Capability Brown.

Watson

Adverse financial circumstances forced the Verney family to let the house from 1887 to various tenants. Finally, it was sold in 1921 to the Leeds soap magnate Josph Watson of Linton Spring near Wetherby in Yorkshire, who in 1922 was raised to the peerage as "Baron Manton of Compton Verney". He never lived in the house as he died in 1922 of a heart attack whilst hunting nearby with the Warwickshire Foxhounds. His title was taken from his horse-racing training establishment at Manton near Marlborough in Wiltshire. He was buried nearby in the churchyard of his estate at Offchurch, Warwickshire. His eldest son and heir Miles Watson, 2nd Baron Manton resided at Compton Verney for a short while, but soon sold it and moved to Plumpton Place in Sussex.

Other

It then belonged to various owners before being requisitioned by the War Office during the Second World War. After the War, the house was never lived in again. It now belongs to the Compton Verney House Trust who run it as an Art Gallery.