Author Vanessa Beaumont on how an inherited house became a character she has fallen in love with

The author Vanessa Beaumont and her husband took on his grandfather’s house, Bywell Hall, a Palladian house built in 1752 to designs by James Paine, just before lock down. After a period where its future was uncertain the house is now a leading character in their story
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Tom Griffiths

The renovated kitchen designed by Flora Soames.

Tom Griffiths

Years passed, we got married, the house lay empty, we had one child, then two, then a third. We were living in London but spending every weekend and holiday and spare minute we could in Northumberland, but all the while taking over more and more space in my parent’s in law’s house, with the chaos and mass of stuff that three small children inevitably brings. And so, one day, we decided it was time. The room of mattresses was cleared, the crates of paintings prised open, the box upon box of old lamps, ceramics, china, old curtains, were opened up, shaken out, dusted off. A 1970s pine kitchen that had been my husband’s grandfather’s was pulled out, its false ceiling dismantled to reveal a beautiful Georgian cornice. A kitchen was put in, and an Aga, curtains hung, a huge oak table found in the garage was sanded down, the study hung with paintings of his and mine, and shelves filled with books (and complete with the absolute essential, a telly), we reorganised the library – total heaven for me – and a scrappy but vital playroom created from old sofas and long-overlooked armchairs and tartan rugs. The untold joy of the first supper cooked in our new family kitchen gave the house breath in its lungs.

Carvings by Grinling Gibbons surround a portrait of the Marquess of Rockingham in front of Wentworth Wodehouse by Mercier. On the chest of drawers is the Bywell Bull a symbol from the family's garter banner and the family emblem.

Tom Griffiths

And then came March 2020. Twelve weeks were spent in lockdown living here, home-schooling and working, but also watching spring come, leaves grow, flowers bloom… and we have never looked back. And now, when I look up at the portraits of my husband’s family – for I am in one sense the outsider in this house, the interloper who has come in  – I hope that, though they might find our taste in music and food and the Pilates mats of lockdown a little confusing, that they would give a nod of approval.

Because it’s a home, with a heart, and it’s a character that I’ve undoubtedly fallen in love with.

The Other Side of Paradise by Vanessa Beaumont is published 9th May by Oneworld in hardback; £20.