Raynham Hall
Raynham Hall is a Jacobean country house near Fakenham in Norfolk, England, constructed beginning in 1619 by Sir Roger Townshend, 1st Baronet, as the principal seat of the Townshend family, who have held it continuously and bear the title Marquess Townshend since 1787.[1][2]
The architecture reflects early classical influences predating the full Palladian revival, with Sir Roger, an amateur designer assisted by William Edge, incorporating Ionic pilasters, a prominent Venetian window, and Dutch gables on the facade.[1] In the 1720s, William Kent overhauled the interiors for the 2nd Viscount Townshend, creating the Marble Hall with its checkerboard floor and domed ceiling, a cantilevered oak staircase, and ornate saloons featuring grand fireplaces and family portraits.[1][3]
The estate's history intertwines with the Townshend lineage, producing figures such as Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount ("Turnip Townshend"), who pioneered crop rotation and agricultural improvements there in the early 18th century, and later marquesses including George, 1st Marquess, a field marshal and Viceroy of Ireland, and George, 7th Marquess, founder of Anglia Television who oversaw restorations.[2] Today, under Charles Townshend, 8th Marquess, the privately owned hall and 5,000-acre estate emphasize sustainable farming and selective public access, while retaining original furnishings and bullet marks from its World War II military use.[2][4] Raynham Hall also holds a place in popular lore as the site of the "Brown Lady" ghost legend, purportedly captured in a 1936 Country Life photograph widely dismissed as a double exposure hoax lacking empirical verification.[5][6]