How Caple Court
Opening Times
We are sorry but the gardens are not currently open to the public.
Visiting How Caple
The house is not open to the public, though the Grade II listed building forms
an imposing backdrop to the garden.
After experiencing the romantic atmosphere of the garden, visitors can enjoy a
pot of tea, scones and cake in the Courtyard Tearoom.
The delightful medieval church, dedicated to St Andrew, dates back to the 13th
Century but overlies older Norman foundations. Still in use it contains
beautiful stained glass windows, a Norman font and a 16th Century diptych from
Southern Germany which has been beautifully restored.
History
How Caple Court stands to the North of the thirteenth century Parish Church of
St Andrew and St Mary in the old Hundred of Greytree.
Standing on a small bluff overlooking the River Wye, it has wonderful southerly
views across the valley towards the Welsh hills and the edge of the Forest of
Dean. These are a memorable sight on a clear day and Testify to the excellent
choice of the site by the original settlers.
The present road from King's Caple follows much the same route as the old Roman
Road from Abergavenny to Gloucester and after passing the entrance to the Court,
joins the old Hereford to Gloucester high road.
The presence of Roman foundations and other material in the vicinity suggests
some sort of activity on this site from early times and this is hardly
surprising since it is blessed with such a favourable topographical situation.
The name How Caple would seem to be derived from 'Capala' while How, or Hue,
denotes a high situation on the side of a hill in northern England and implies
in Anglo-Saxon a residence.
In the Domesday Book of 1089, the Manor of How Caple was listed as holding five
hides, but by 1216 William de Capel held the Knight's Fee from the Bishop of
Hereford and this family retained control of the Manor until 1672. At this
juncture, it was sold together with the Sollershope Estates to Sir William
Gregory of Hill House, Woolhope, thus severing the family connection after
nearly five hundred years. In turn the Gregorys, or their relatives, continued
to live at the Court until the late nineteenth century. By 1885, the Estate
belonged to the Rev. Thomas Beville Paynter of Wadham College, Oxford, but
passed rapidly through various hands until the property was acquired by the
present owner's great grandfather Lennox Bertram Lee in 1900.
