

The gardens, like the house, are due largely to Sir Roger Newdigate, and are in the picturesque manner prevalent in the second half of the eighteenth century, when there was a tendency to obliterate the formal planting fashionable at the beginning of the century and to replace it with rolling lawns, serpentine paths, clumps of judiciously sited trees and artificial lakes, often extending far beyond the immediate vicinity of the house.
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