Warter Priory
Warter Priory is an country estate in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. Yorkshire Wolds, centred south-west of the village of Warter and east of Pocklington. The estate had a country house from the 17th century until its demolition in 1972.
The modern estate
In 1998 The Times described the estate as of grade II and III arable land, of grass and dale, of woodland and of let land. It was then operated by about 24 workers.In 1998 the estate was purchased from the Constantine Phipps, 5th Marquess of Normanby by British entrepreneur Malcolm Healey for a reported £48 million. As of 2023, it had about 50 shooting drives and 63 houses.
In 2018 Healey obtained planning permission to build a new house on the site of the former country house, to create a modern informal garden and to restore the parkland.
The country house
A modest two-storey, five-bay country house originally named Warter Hall was built by the Pennington family of Muncaster Castle in the late 17th century. It was renamed Warter Priory in the 1830s after the former Augustinian priory in nearby Warter village. Major extensions were made in 1872, and it was re-fronted with corner towers added.The last Lord Muncaster sold the house in 1878 to Hull shipping magnate Charles Wilson. In 1885 impressive alterations were made, including adding a great baronial-style hall and a tall entrance tower. The house now had nearly 100 rooms. Lord Nunburnholme died in 1907, survived by his widow for another 20 years.
In 1929 the house was sold to George Ellis Vestey, second son of the William Vestey, 1st Baron Vestey and Sarah Ellis. After Vestey's death, the house and the then estate were sold in December 1968 for £4 million to Oswald Phipps, 4th Marquess of Normanby and the Guinness Trust, primarily for shooting.
The house contents were auctioned in March 1969, and when a tenant could not be found the house was considered surplus to requirements, as was common for country houses at that time. The house was demolished and the gardens bulldozed in 1972, the rubble being used to fill the garden lake.
In 1998 The Times reported that the house had been described as "one of Yorkshire's greatest country houses, an architectural gem" and a "French-style grand house" with a marble-staircase and a elaborately carved oak fireplace. It noted it could also have been viewed as a "Victorian monstrosity" with 100 rooms and more than 365 windows requiring 40 servants and a "bottomless pocket" to maintain.