OTT2018LOGOa

MOST OF US WILL NEVER DO GREAT THINGS, BUT WE CAN ALL DO SMALL THINGS IN A GREAT WAY.

OTT2018LOGOa

A bit of history

A BIT OF HISTORY

Wild deer have been kept at Donington Park for almost a thousand years, over which time it has built up a rich history and tradition. Today it works as part of the Park Farmhouse estate, allowing them to serve their own venison all year around. 

They’re committed to conserving the natural habitats of the park; a heritage which includes not only the deer but also very rare species of insect life which live in the park’s ancient oak trees, a collection worthy of protection in their own right. They work with Natural England in the preservation of the insect and tree species and are advised by the British Deer Society on the conservation of the red and fallow deer herds. 

The road outside the Farmhouse was called The Redway, and the house was built as Redway House in the early 1600s. In about 1720 the brick barn buildings were all added as a model farm, as was the fashion in the early part of the agricultural revolution. It formed part of the Donington Estate, owned by the Hastings family, who lived at Ashby de la Zouch Castle until the civil war and then moved to Donington Hall thereafter. Donington was extensively rebuilt by the Marquis of Hastings, the first Governor General of India, in the 1790s, and at that time Wilson Lodge was altered and “gothicised” to match the other two entrance lodges to the park and the hall itself.

Wilson Lodge (the part of the hotel behind the stone wall) was a gated entrance. A bell pull was installed at the top of Walton Hill, and the gatekeeper had just enough time to pull his boots on and open the gates before a carriage approached, on its way to the hall. The Army built a new road to bypass the lodge during the second world war, and this is now the caravan site entrance. In 1988 the lodge was rebuilt entirely and also joined on to the hotel by the current owners. The front stone wall was also straightened so that the lodge could no longer serve as a point of entrance.

The Threshing Barn is entirely original, except for its doors. Those at the front have been shortened, and the rear doors have been replaced with an alcove. In the 18th century it was used as a place to preach to the local farm workers by John Wesley, who, with his brother Charles, was sponsored by Lady Selena Hastings. She also used oak from Donington to build chapels in spa towns and other fashionable centres in the somewhat flawed idea of trying to convert the wealthy to Methodism.

The farm was purchased by the Shields family in 1926 and many of the barns were converted into pigsties. An army building was added during the second world war, and this is now used for wedding breakfasts. The first wedding party was held in 1985, and in 1986 the farmhouse was converted to a four-bedroom guesthouse. The hotel has continued to develop ever since that date, with alterations being carried out over each winter period.