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Gennings Park (sometimes spelt Jennings, and referred to as Gennings House or Gennings Court), located on Lughorse Lane near Hunton, Kent, is a Grade II listed house which was built between 1727 and 1745. The home was listed on 5 December 1984 (English Heritage Legacy ID: 432086). The document indicates that the house "possibly incorporating part of a late C16 or C17 house" was extensively modified in the subsequent years, and was "thought to be the setting for 'Pride and Prejudice'. (Mr. Mattingley, unpublished work on Gennings)". That assumption is not supported by other sources, however.

Occupants

In the mid to late 18th century, the house was purchased by Sir Walter Roberts, 6th Bt. His only child, Jane Roberts, inherited the house upon his death. Jane Roberts married George Beauclerk, 3rd Duke of St Albans (a great-grandson of Charles II of England). The 3rd Duke and Duchess of St Albans had no children, and the Duchess died in 1778.

In 1871 the Liberal politician Henry Campbell-Bannerman inherited the estate from his uncle, Henry Bannerman, and the Campbell-Bannermans kept the house as their country residence until 1887. (In fact, Campbell-Bannerman inherited the entire estate of Hunton Court Lodge but did not occupy the mansion until the 1894 death of the aunt who was living there. He and his wife used Gennings Park during some of that time.)

Upon his death in 1908, newspapers reported that the Gennings Park Estate was inherited by his nephew James Campbell-Bannerman inherited the estate in 1908.

Following the Campbell-Bannermans' departure in 1887, the house was lived in by John Bazley White, who lived in the house until at least 1893. Whilst many newspaper reports in 1908 suggest that the Gennings Park Estate formed part of the Estate of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, some suggest that the house was first leased in 1888, then sold to the tenant in 1890. The House was listed to be let in November 1887; the description of the house in The Daily Telegraph included the description: Hall, three reception rooms, billiard room, smoking room, eight principal bed roomns, three dressing rooms, 10 secondary bed roomns, kitchen, scullery, panty, butler's room, &c. Stabling for seven horses, carriage houses, coachman's house, &c. Walled-in gardens, containing greenhosuse, vinvery, peach and melon houses, &c. Hay barn, cowhouse, stable, &c., There are also pleasure grounds and about 37 acres of land, with shooting over 800 acres. FURNISHED.

In 1895 the occupants of the house were Conservative MP and distiller Sir Frederick Seager Hunt, 1st Bt and his wife.

In June 1901 the Evening Standard Newspaper reported that Gennings Park, near Maidstone, has been sold via private treaty by Messrs. Hamptons.

The House seems to have been the residence of Lord Arthur Butler and Lady Arthur Butler (who became Marquess and Marchioness of Ormonde in 1919) from at least 1902. Lord Arthur was the younger brother and heir to James Butler, 3rd Marquess of Ormonde. Lady Arthur Butler (nee Ellen Stager) was an American Heiress. They continued to live at Gennings after Lord Arthur inherited the title Marquess of Ormonde. Lord Ormonde died in 1943, and Lady Ormonde retained ownership of Gennings, where she continued to live Gennings with her son, Lord Arthur (who would later become Arthur Butler, 6th Marquess of Ormonde in 1949), his wife Jesse and their daughter, Lady Martha, until her death in 1951.

In 1955 their second son, Arthur Butler, 6th Marquess of Ormonde, sold Gennings and much of its contents. The house was reported as sold by Country Life on 28 April 1955, and described as 'a house with 20 bedrooms, a period farm-house and model farm, 16 cottages and 173 acres,'.

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