Hawkwood College

About Hawkwood College

Hawkwood College is a registered charity and independent centre for education in a 19th-century Grade II listed building on 42 acres of grounds, including gardens, pastures, woodland and a natural spring overlooking the Stroud Valley. SettingThe main house, a Tudor Gothic villa dating back to 1845, is a large gabled residence in the Cotswold style adjoined by a number of other listed buildings, providing a facility for meetings, conferences and courses. There are ten acres of woodland bounding the estate, acres of grass land managed by Stroud Community Agriculture; a Victorian half-walled garden growing fruit, herbs, flowers and vegetables for the house; an award winning pond and wetlands system processing household output; mature ornamental grounds with a sycamore and beside it the Hawkwood spring. No formal qualifications are needed to participate. HistoryThe GroveFirst records of the estate go back to 1688 when it was part of the parish of Painswick, was known as The Grove and belonged to a certain John Mayo who died in 1715, leaving it to his daughters. Hestor, one of the daughters, was married to Samuel Capel, a Stroud clothier, who bought out the shares of the other daughters. Over the next years, the Capel family built up an estate of 822 acres in Painswick, Slad and Stroud, of which The Grove was the centre. At some point before 1842, this house had been badly damaged by fire. It was William Capel (d. 1883) who engaged George Basevi, architect of the Subscription Rooms and the wings at Painswick House, to rebuild the house as it stands today, and a descendent, Lt. -Col. William Capel, who sold the bulk of the estate in 1914, the house on its 40 acres being sold four years after his death in 1932 to a Col. Murray. Col. Murray named it “Hawkwood” after the colourful 14th century mercenary Sir John Hawkwood, commander of the legendary White Company, whom he particularly admired.

Hawkwood College Description

Hawkwood College is a registered charity and independent centre for education in a 19th-century Grade II listed building on 42 acres of grounds, including gardens, pastures, woodland and a natural spring overlooking the Stroud Valley. SettingThe main house, a Tudor Gothic villa dating back to 1845, is a large gabled residence in the Cotswold style adjoined by a number of other listed buildings, providing a facility for meetings, conferences and courses. There are ten acres of woodland bounding the estate, acres of grass land managed by Stroud Community Agriculture; a Victorian half-walled garden growing fruit, herbs, flowers and vegetables for the house; an award winning pond and wetlands system processing household output; mature ornamental grounds with a sycamore and beside it the Hawkwood spring. No formal qualifications are needed to participate. HistoryThe GroveFirst records of the estate go back to 1688 when it was part of the parish of Painswick, was known as The Grove and belonged to a certain John Mayo who died in 1715, leaving it to his daughters. Hestor, one of the daughters, was married to Samuel Capel, a Stroud clothier, who bought out the shares of the other daughters. Over the next years, the Capel family built up an estate of 822 acres in Painswick, Slad and Stroud, of which The Grove was the centre. At some point before 1842, this house had been badly damaged by fire. It was William Capel (d. 1883) who engaged George Basevi, architect of the Subscription Rooms and the wings at Painswick House, to rebuild the house as it stands today, and a descendent, Lt. -Col. William Capel, who sold the bulk of the estate in 1914, the house on its 40 acres being sold four years after his death in 1932 to a Col. Murray. Col. Murray named it “Hawkwood” after the colourful 14th century mercenary Sir John Hawkwood, commander of the legendary White Company, whom he particularly admired.