Bath House at Corsham Court
The Bath House at Corsham Court, Corsham, Wiltshire, England, is a garden structure dating from the mid-18th century. The combined work of two major English architects, it was designed by Capability Brown and subsequently remodelled by John Nash. It is a Grade I listed building.
History
Corsham Court was built in 1582 by Thomas Smythe, a haberdasher and customs collector for the City of London. In 1745 the estate was bought by Paul Methuen, grandson of another wealthy cloth merchant. Dying unmarried in 1757, the house passed to his cousin, another Paul, who in 1761 employed Capability Brown to make major alterations to the court and to landscape the grounds. Brown's main focus was the reconstruction of the house, in particular the building of a picture gallery to accommodate the large number of paintings Methuen had inherited from his cousin, but during his time at Corsham, Brown undertook the construction of the bath house to the north of the court.Between 1797 and 1802, the bath house was reconstructed by John Nash, who had been employed to make further modifications to the house by Paul Cobb Methuen. Nash undertook the construction of a number of buildings in the grounds, mostly in Gothick styles, including the stables, the coach house, a cloistered dairy and a cottage by the lake. His reworking of the bath house was extensive, including the insertion of arches to the front of the building, reconstruction of the roof and renovation of the interior. Nash's remodelling saw the removal of some of Brown's earlier Gothick stonework, elements of which were incorporated into structures Nash was building elsewhere on the estate, including the Sham Ruin that stands to the front of the court.