Busby Hall has been in the possession of the Marwood family since 1587.[3] The current building was constructed in 1764 after a devastating fire destroyed a much earlier building.[4] It is known that plans for a grander building were prepared by the preeminent neo-classicalarchitectJohn Carr of York but were later abandoned.[5] The constructed design was by Robert Corney.[6] It has been remarked that the design of the house appears to be earlier in style than was typical for the time, but the reason for this or why the plans of a more fashionable architect were not used is not clear.[7] The house sits in the centre of a 700-acre parkland with a number of other listed buildings. These include the Grade II stable block located to the north and a Grade II* walled garden to the south east of the Hall.[8]
There are several acres of gardens which surround the hall, which once contained a chestnut tree reputed to be the largest in England.[9]
Considered one of the great literary works of the 20th century, Parade's End details the story of an ancient landed family from Yorkshire.[14] It is purported that Madox Ford based the novel on both his then friend Arthur, a scion of the Marwood family, and their home Busby Hall.[15]Sir William Marwood, Arthur's elder brother is similarly considered the inspiration for Mark Tietjens.[16] There is are several piece of evidence for this. First, it is noted that the parities between Arthur Marwood and Christopher Tietjens are highly apparent, Marwood and Tietjens both being talented economists and regarded for their stoic and 'honourable' characteristics.[17] It is also evident that Busby Hall shares many similarities with Tietjen's Groby Hall, including the location. In the novel, several references are made to 'Groby Great Tree' which is thought to be inspired by the famed chestnut tree.[18] It is also case that Busby was let for a period of time as also occurs at the end of the novel when the Groby Great Tree is symbolically felled by the brash new tenant.[19] The similarities of the locations, characters and events of the book proved sensitive for Marwood who permanently broke off contact with Madox Ford.[17]
References
^Archives, The National. "The Discovery Service". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
^Mizener, Arthur. (1985). The saddest story : a biography of Ford Madox Ford (Repr ed.). New York: Carroll & Graf. ISBN0-88184-187-0. OCLC63480284.
^ abMoser, Thomas C. (14 July 2014). The life in the fiction of Ford Madox Ford. Princeton, New Jersey. ISBN978-1-4008-5620-6. OCLC889251083.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)