
Welcome to The Oxford Programme's European home at Howbery Manor near Oxford, England.
Howbery Park is a 36-ha park located adjacent to the River
Thames in Crowmarsh Gifford near Wallingford, UK. Its main feature
is an English manor house built in about 1850 by English MP William
Seymour Blackstone. Blackstone fell into debt, largely because of
the costs of building this new home, and spent time in the debtors
prison at Oxford. His debt problems also contributed to the end of
his political career. He died in Brighton, never having lived at
Howbery Park.
Manor House at Howbery Park
Other owners of Howbery Park were Henry Bertie Williams-Wynn
(who purchased the house in 1867), Harvey du Cros (in 1902) and
George Denison Faber, 1st Baron Wittenham.
The estate passed into the ownership of the government in the
1930s and was used during the Second World War to house US and
Canadian servicemen and then refugees from Central Europe. After
the war it was selected as the location for the new Hydraulics
Research Station (HRS) established under the directorship of Sir
Claude Inglis. HRS was privatised in 1982 from the Department of
the Environment (DoE) and HR Wallingford Group was created. The new
company was limited by guarantee, had no shareholders and was given
the remit to invest in hydraulic research. The assets transferred
with Howbery Park in 1982 included the
grant-funded-state-of-the-art- Fountain Building, and a new
mainframe computer.
There are several stories of strange occurrences concering
Howbery Park. The most common one is the ghost of the Lady in Grey.
Several drivers on Benson Lane, adjacent to Howbery Park, claim to
have swerved to avoid a lady dressed in grey who was walking in the
road. A lady in grey was seen to walk in the grounds of the French
Gardens, now the site of the South Oxfordshire District Council.
Local stories are that this is the ghost of Lady Wittenham, wife of
George Denison Faber, 1st Baron Wittenham.
In addition to HR Wallingford who occupy a new building, Kestrel
House, several other organisations are now based in Howbery Park
including the Environment Agency and now The Oxford Programme.