Racing and revelry
In the 300th anniversary of the birth of the architect James Paine, Richard Hewlings assesses his work on Doncaster’s Mansion House, South Yorkshire
Doncaster came into existence as a roman fort at the point where the Great north road crosses the Don and as an inland port. It did not develop a staple industry, but a fertile hinterland preserved the town’s prosperity until its industrial expansion. this followed the arrival of the railway in 1852 and the opening of collieries as late as 1905. then, in 1971, came the Inner relief road, an act of self-mutilation.
some sense of the town’s former interest and character is, however, preserved in one outstandingly beautiful street of national note: south Parade, the length of the Great north road that leads into town from the racecourse, is lined by ancient trees and fine houses by the local architect William Lindley (1739–1818).
at one end, south Parade transforms into the High street, where one theatrically antique building stands out: the Mansion House, an assembly room designed by James Paine and begun in 1745 (Fig 3). Both its title and architectural grandeur are, however, out of all proportion to the status of 18th-century Doncaster. Mansion houses were otherwise the preserve of the greatest cities, such as London and York. the corporation of Doncaster was not outstandingly wealthy nor did it return its own MP until 1885, so the neighbouring gentry had little cause to patronise the town. What forces then created the Mansion House?
Since at least 1600, the Corporation had allowed racing on the commons and, from 1704, it began to sponsor the sport as a source of income. Entertaining the ever-growing numbers of fashionable visitors to the races presented a problem as the existing town hall —where the Mayor hosted at least six annual Corporation feasts—was little more than a lash-up. It must have been to solve this that, in 1739, the Corporation appointed a committee to purchase a site for an assembly rooms.
Its members were unlikely to have been connoisseurs: seven out of the nine can be identified—two tanners, two grocers, one mason, one attorney and one gentleman of the town. Numerous committees of a similar character succeeded it. Thus, surprising as it may seem, ancient architecture was introduced to Doncaster by its tradesmen.
The committee might have appointed a local architect, such as William Rickard, carpenter, joiner, cabinet-maker, surveyor and a member of the Corporation. Or those at one remove from the Corporation: Rickard’s father-inlaw, George Platt of Woodlaithes, for example, was the architect at nearby Cusworth Hall in 1740–1 and builder of Burrow Hall, Lancashire, to the designs of the Deputy Surveyor of the Kings Works, Westby Gill (a native of Rotherham).
Alternatively, the Corporation could have followed the example of local grandees. Lord Malton, for example, had just engaged Henry Flitcroft, a protégé of Lord Burlington, the arbiter of architectural taste, to complete the east front of Wentworth Woodhouse. Instead, by February 1745, the Corporation had left the design, specifically ‘the front of the Mansion House… to Mr Pain’s direction’.
This was James Paine, appointed in December 1744 at the age of 27 to supervise the transformation of nearby Nostell Priory (to the designs of Col James Moyser). Paine came from Hampshire and was also a protégé of Lord Burlington’s; he had passed his formative years in the St Martin’s Lane Academy, the crucible of Rococo design. Paine gave the Corporation a façade part-derived from one of Inigo Jones’s Whitehall Palace proposals.
Inside, an imperial stair (Fig 2), a new fashion set by William Kent, gives a theatrical approach to the Grand Room, which occu- pies the whole width of the first floor and its coved ceiling rises into the roof space, with a Music Gallery set into the cove on the side opposite the entrance (Fig 1).
The Corporation’s objectives are opaque, but indicative. It appointed a building committee in November 1744, then discharged and replaced it in April 1745. The Corporation took over this committee’s responsibilities in May, appointed a third committee in August and ordered a stop to construction in November (a response to the Jacobite Rising), by which time, vaults had been dug and walls were rising.
On February 28, 1746, Paine agreed to build the Mansion House for £4,523 4s 6d, suggesting that he was henceforth contractor as well as architect. He was paid in instalments, in March and October 1746, July 1747 and October 1748. In February 1748, an alteration to the middle window of the Great Room was ordered ‘according to the design sent down by Mr Paine’. ‘Musick at Opening the Mansion House’ was paid for on April 15, 1749.
Paine published his design in 1751, illustrating ceiling paintings in plaster frames and a faux curtain held by naked atlantes over the music gallery, but the Grand Room’s ornament was actually executed in plaster
(Fig 5). Paine’s book specifically mentioned the plasterers Thomas Perritt and Joseph Rose. Both later became known for Rococo ornament of the type that enlivens the stair and Grand Room at Doncaster and they may have learnt this type of ornament from Paine, who was the master of it.
In October 1748, Paine was also asked ‘what furniture was thought proper’ and to estimate for it, suggesting that he may have designed it. Six surviving carved and gilt sconces
(Fig 6), for which the Doncaster carver Christopher Richardson was paid in 1755, bear a general resemblance to Paine’s drawings at Nostell and Felbrigg. Richardson is likely to have also carved the tympanum ornament on the façade and the statue of Justice illustrated in Paine’s book; his bill also covers ‘joiner’s work’.
Other distinctive internal ornament includes the stair balustrade, almost identical to that at Nostell, and probably the work of the leading London smith Thomas Wagg, whose notebook records ‘general smith work [and gates]… For Mr James Paine, sent to Doncaster’ in 1747.
George Gibson, whose contract for mason’s work was drawn up in February 1745, may also have been an outsider, as, in December 1744,
‘Entertaining the ever growing number of visitors presented a problem’
he had been paid for ‘coming over and giving proposals… for the Front of the Mansion House’. He had built a new town bridge in 1741. Where he came over from is not known.
Many of the tradesmen involved were, however, local. John Beale, a member of the committee, Chamberlain before 1751 and Mayor in 1753, was engaged in January 1745 ‘to do the Inside Mason Work at ye Mansion House’ (confusingly, this work must be brick). William Rickard, Mayor in 1774, was the carpenter and also made frames for candle stands in 1749, a press for the Common Dining Room in 1754, four dining tables and two sideboard tables in 1756 and was included on the Mansion House Furnishing Committee in 1762.
Another local bricklayer, Thomas Pennystone, put up a ‘smookiack’ in the kitchen in 1759, which is still there and George Hallifax, watch-