Monthly Archives: April 2025

Dancing across the lawns

Philip Napier Miles in the Library at Kings Weston House in the 1920s.

The last squire of Kings Weston, Philp Napier Miles, was well known for his love of music. When not composing he was actively promoting local musicians and choral groups, championing a national English opera, and setting up the city’s music festival; sadly, such things are now largely forgotten. Even less well known was his dedication to country dancing.

With dance so fundamental to so much English folk music it’s perhaps unsurprising that his interest was piqued. The pre-WWI era was a period when many composers were still keenly hunting out tradditional melodies for preservation and inspiration. The exodus of the rural population into the cities during the Victorian period threatened the loss of tradditional customs and, like many ladies and gentlemen of the age, Napier Miles seems to have been as keen to protect dances as part of the nation’s heritage.

The English Folk Dance Society was set up in 1911 to collect dances, publish and teach them. By 1926, Napier Miles was chairman of the county executive of the society and frequently offered up Kings Weston for dance festivals and demonstrations. The first such festival seems to have been held in 1923 and annual events continued through the 1930s. They were grand summer events held on the lawns outside the house in the summer months, either June or July, and well attended, 300 spectators being reported in some years.

A rare 1930 photo of the festival in full swing on the lawns. The photo is taken from the roof of the house with the path leading up to the Echo on the right. 

Napier Miles’s good friend Ralph Vaughan Williams interested in folk music and dance beginning collecting music as early as 1903. Later he became first president of the English Folk Dance and Song Society when it formed in 1932. It’s perhaps unsurprising that he was a regular visitor to the festivals put on by Miles.

The event we know most about, one when Vaughan Williams was present, was held in 1926. Marques were erected for the serving of teas which were, no doubt, essential in sustaining the dancers and spectators for five hours of a summer afternoon while over 40 dances were performed. There was a mix of local dancers and those from EFDS headquarters in Letchworth with some “open” dances where all present were invited to participate. In Vaughan Williams own words, the event presented a “fascinating sight on the lawns of Kings Weston”. As the event closed at 8pm, the sun would have been low in the sky over the Severn and an idyllic scene created as the participants left for home.

Western Daily press news report on the Country Dance festival held on the lawns in 1926. 

Ancient Avenue Repairs

We were delighted to discover the recent planting of four new lime trees on the estate. These have been planted by the Council tree team and replace some of the lost trees on the historic avenue leading to the house.

One of five replacement trees on the north side of the Ancient avenue, just planted this month.  

This avenue was first planted at the turn of the 18th Century by Sir Robert Southwell and his son Edward. The limes are recorded as young trees in two of the many avenues leading from the house in the well-known engraving of the park from about 1710. From then on, they remain a constant feature of the park through history , surviving the de-formalisation of the grounds in the mid-Eighteenth Century. In the last decade several have succumbed to disease.

The new trees, one on the south side of the avenue and three on the north, replicate the historic spacing and repair gaps that have gradually opened up. Along with the new avenue planted by KWAG in 2012, these go a long way to reinstating something of the formality of the original garden layout.  

With the old trunk ground out, a replacement lime tree takes its place next to some of the ancient examples.
Seen in Kip’s 1710 engraving, the sections of the avenue still with us are ringed in red.  

Restoration at the Echo

Since 2022, one corner of the Sir John Vabrugh designed Echo has been held aloft only by means of a nylon strap. This was attached during urgent maintenance work when the dilapidated condition of the cornice was first raised as a concern. At the same time, the brambles and other weeds whose roots were penetrating the mortar joints were cleared off. However, it’s taken a considerable time for the Council conservators to return.

The Echo takes on the appearance of a sentry box with the restorers scaffolding and palisades erected. 

Last month we had the first reports that the long-promised scaffolding was being erected, along with a palisade protecting it from any abuse or vandalism. The whole structure took on a formidable appearance while contractors worked to re-mortar and repair the stonework. At the same time, some of the overhanging trees that were threatening to knock down the decorative urns were also trimmed back.

Hopefully, perhaps even by now, the work will be finished and the building revealed again to the public.

The Echo in 1927. Philip Napier Miles enjoyed a rustic garden style that saw him allow plants to spring up out of the building’s stonework and steps. The two chairs inside are hollowed out from fallen tree trunks! 

Triumphant Spring setting for the historic bridge

October’s Big Bulb Plant at the Iron Bridge has come good with a sensational display this Spring. The heavy work preparing the ground and digging holes through rubble was definitely worth the effort; the visual impact speaks for itself!

A panorama looking down and across the slope towards Shirehampton Road with the bridge on the left. The City boundary marker is now surrounded by flowers. 

Both sides of the Iron Bridge looked phenomenal in the Spring sun during March, though flowers are just going over now.  We hope that everyone who contributed to the bulb plant will have had the chance to go up, take a look and enjoy the display. It certainly seems to have attracted a lot of attention.

John Loudon McAdam’s iron bridge is now set in a sea of gold on the Kingsweston Hill side

This October we hope to give daffodils a rest. The cultivated blooms are not suitable for many parts of the historic estate and we’re keen to diversify into more native species. As part of the Nature Conservation plan being developed by the Council we hope to agree suitable species and locations that will both ornament the estate and improve its appeal for nature.

The northern approach to the bridge on the Kingsweston Hill side. 

More light laurel pruning below the Echo

The issues of invasive cherry laurel are well known; outcompeting native species, leaching toxins into the soil, and contributing to soil erosion, are just three reasons that many hundreds of hours of volunteer work have been devoted to its removal. Whilst it was once maintained as a decorative landscaping plant, it’s now run wild and is having a seriously detrimental impact on the woodland and the soil.

the cherry laurel regrowth long the mid-18th Century pleasure walk 

The last two working parties this year returned to the area on the north-east side of the Echo path, sections of the estate we originally felled laurel in around nine years ago. Whilst much was poisoned by the Council in the wake of our work, the areas closer to Kings Weston house weren’t treated and have more quickly regrown. This was the target of March’s working party.

With a good team of volunteers, we carried on the surgical removal of the laurel whilst leaving the native species that have begun to recolonise the area. Starting from the twin ponds, work progressed downhill throughout the day though, sadly, we didn’t manage to clear as far as the boundary with the house; this was left for a few volunteers to clear away later.

The area behind the two ponds before and after volunteer work. Many native bulbs were planted here in the autumn of 2014, many of which had been hidden. 

In the process of opening the area back up many of the saplings and native bulbs planted in the area have been revealed. In February we found the snowdrops lost beneath the laurel growth, and last month the bluebells and miniature daffodils were rediscovered, now better able to reach the sun! Eventually, when the laurel toxins have eventually leached out of the soil and the forest floor has matured further, it will ensure that rainwater run-off from the slope will be more effectively captured.  

the view from the pleasure walk along the garden edge looking towards the main Echo path and the lawns beyond.