We were greeted by the first bad weather of our stay as we began to make our way home across Dartmoor to give us the opportunity to visit Castle Drogo even though it was close to Exeter which is one place we don't go to.
It was pelting down at one stage but cleared up enough for us to have a long visit including a cream tea. The castle is owned by the National Trust and was only built 100 years ago or so. It is very impressive with exceptional gardens which must look at their best in another month's time.
Castle Drogo is a country house near Drewsteignton, Devon, England. It was built in the 1910s and 1920s for Julius Drewe (businessman and founder of the Home and Colonial Stores) to designs by architect Edwin Lutyens, and is a Grade I listed building.[1] Castle Drogo was the last castle to be built in England, and probably the last private house in the country to be built entirely of granite.
The stately home borrows styles of castle building from the medieval and Tudor periods, along with more minimalist contemporary approaches. A notable feature is the encasement of the service staircase, around which the main staircase climbs. Its defensive characteristics are essentially decorative.
The castle has a fine formal garden, designed by Lutyens with planting by Gertrude Jekyll, which contrasts effectively with its striking setting on the edge of Dartmoor. The garden is noted for its rhododendrons and magnolias, herbaceous borders, rose garden, shrub garden and circular croquet lawn.
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