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1796 acres, Whole - The Bapton Manor Estate, Bapton Manor, Bapton, Warminster, BA12, Wiltshire
For Sale -
Guide Price £25,000,000
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Grade II Listed Manor House with 8 bedrooms, plus further houses and cottages
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Numerous farm building complexes with grain drying and storage capacity for over 4,000 tonnes and extensive livestock facilities
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Further buildings with potential for alternative uses (subject to planning)
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1,311 acres of arable farmland, 283 acres of permanent pasture 153 acres of woodland
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Excellent potential for a partridge and pheasant shoot
A classic English Agricultural and Sporting Estate in Wiltshire's rolling Downland
Location
The Bapton Manor Estate is situated in the Wylye Valley and has excellent communication links being just one mile from the A303/A36 junction, providing easy access to London (via the M3), the south west (via the A303) and the Cathedral City of Salisbury (via the A36), with a regular train service to London Waterloo (from 88 minutes).
Close to the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge, the Estate also forms part of the Cranborne Chase National Landscape (formerly termed an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty), known for its chalk streams and beautiful unspoilt countryside.
Heathrow Airport is about 82 miles distant, while Southampton Airport and Yeovilton are each around 35 miles and both can accommodate private aircraft.
The general area is well renowned for its excellent choice of schools including Chafyn Grove, Dauntsey's, Godolphin, Marlborough College, Port Regis, Salisbury Cathedral School, Sandroyd, Bryanston, Sherborne, St Mary's Shaftesbury and Warminster.
Race meetings at Salisbury, Wincanton and Newbury. Hunting with the South & West Wiltshire Hunt and Polo at Tidworth Polo Club and Druids Lodge. There is a good network of bridleways and national trails across the county.
Description
Summary
The Bapton Manor Estate is an impressive country estate with expansive arable and livestock farming enterprises and a portfolio of residential and commercial property. Lying, in part, within the Wylye valley, the Estate has its own fishing on the, well regarded, River Wylye and and excellent potential for a pheasant and partridge shoot over beautiful, rolling Wiltshire downland at the northern edge of the Cranborne Chase National Landscape (formerly AONB).
Towards the north of the Estate is Bapton Manor, an impressive, Grade II listed principal residence of classical Georgian design believed to date back to the 17th Century. The Manor is approached from a horseshoe driveway lined with chestnut trees and enjoys far reaching views of the Estate to the south. Whilst in need of some modernisation, the Manor has all the key attributes of an exceptional family home.
In addition to the Manor House, there are 7 estate houses and cottages, providing rental income and housing for current or former employees. Further revenue is generated by commercial lets and renewable energy receipts, as well as the farming and sporting enterprises.
There are numerous farm building complexes with combined grain drying and storage capacity for over 4,000 tonnes as well as extensive livestock facilities. Some buildings may have potential for alternative uses subject to gaining the necessary planning consents.
The Estate is being offered for sale as a whole or in 6 lots.
History
The village of Bapton has a rich history, dating back to at least the Domesday Book of 1086, where it was recorded as part of the Fisherton de la Mere parish. The village was first specifically mentioned in documents from the early 13th century and became its own "township" by 1249.
Various names including Thomas Payne, the Kellways and Sir Edward Wardour are referred to as having owned Bapton, prior to the Davis family who are understood to have owned the Estate for around 250 years from 1627. A notable historical figure subsequently associated with Bapton is Sir Cecil Chubb, who simultaneously owned both Bapton Manor and Stonehenge before famously gifting Stonehenge to the nation in 1918. After his death, Bapton was sold to Alfred Douglas-Hamilton, the 13th Duke of Hamilton. The current owners acquired the Estate in 1968.
The Manor House itself has 17th-century origins with later additions, and the village layout changed significantly between the 18th and 19th centuries as roads and lanes were rerouted and some disappeared. By the 19th century, Bapton had transformed from a community of small farms into a single large estate, mainly under the Davis family, and later became renowned for its shorthorn cattle herd, considered among the best in England at the time. In 1934, Bapton was transferred from Fisherton de la Mere parish to Stockton following the dissolution of the former parish.
Acreage: 1796 Acres
Directions
Postcode: BA12 0SB
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