Barrington Park is a Palladian style Grade II listed building, near the slightly larger Great Barrington. It was built between 1736 and 1738 for George II’s Lord Chancellor Charles Talbot. In the late nineteenth century, it was extended by Edward Rhys Wingfield.
The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, next door to the house is worth a visit. There are signs of a church here since the Norman times, indicated mainly by the 12th Century chancel arch. A major remodelling took place in the 1500s, which made the church into the much more light and airy structure that we find today. It was built using locally quarried stone, which was also used for St. Paul’s Cathedral in London.
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