Material Maketh Man: Sir John Delaval and the Doddington Hall Tapestries

Discover how reconfiguring antique tapestries helped Doddington Hall’s owner, John Hussey Delaval, to elevate his social status in 18th century Lincolnshire.

The East Front (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

Welcome to Doddington Hall

You’re looking at Doddington Hall’s East front, having just been admitted through the gatehouse. The house is 6 miles from Lincoln and was built around 1595, probably by architect Robert Smythson (of Hardwick Hall fame). It’s now privately owned and partially open to the public.

The Forgotten Room (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

A treasure trove of ‘material histories’

Doddington has never been sold, and has never been emptied, so it’s a real treasure trove for visitors and researchers alike. It’s crammed to the rafters with ‘material histories’ (the stories that objects from the past can tell us about those who owned them).

John Deleval (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

John Delaval’s Doddington

John Hussey Delaval owned Doddington between 1759 and 1808, having inherited it from his mother’s family. When he moved in, he commissioned widespread renovations, including adding a grand new staircase, and reconfiguring three rooms decorated with antique tapestries.

The work coincided with John being made a Baronet by the King, becoming Sir John Delaval.  Lincoln researcher Leah Warriner-Wood was involved in conserving and studying the tapestry interiors of this period. She has pieced together their relationship to John’s social ascent.

First Floor Floorplan (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

Out with the old, and in with the new

John inherited seven rooms with tapestries, but he reduced this to three by 1760, keeping only the best quality of the tapestries available. He clustered those rooms around a new and fashionable first-floor drawing room – a luxurious space for entertaining and influencing guests.

The Holly Bedroom (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

The Holly and Yellow Bedrooms

Two tapestry rooms remain at Doddington Hall today. The hangings in both rooms date from the 1600s and depict scenes of country life, and moments from the Trojan Wars respectively. Conservation showed that most had been heavily altered, repaired, and reconfigured in the 1760s.

Fountain Tapestry (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

Conservation Revelations

In fact, only 4 out of the 17 pieces of tapestry in these rooms were not heavily altered. Some tapestries were cut into large sections and stitched to others to cover bare wall. Others were cut into smaller pieces, that were then used as patches to repair damaged tapestries.

Courting Couple (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

The Holly Bedroom tapestries

This room was designated as the ‘best bedchamber’, for use by guests. The rural life tapestries in here that were in the best condition (those with the fewest alterations) were hung on the wall that was most clearly visible from the bed – the room’s defining piece of furniture.

Military Camp and Pedlar Collage (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

The tapestries in a poorer condition were repaired with patches cut from those in the Yellow Bedroom. Where possible these repairs were concealed, for example by placing the joins behind furniture, or in corners that 18th century candlelight would have lit only dimly.

Holly Bedroom fire damage (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

Where this wasn’t possible, repairs were disguised. Here, a large hole in a tapestry has been concealed by nailing a matching piece over it. The patch’s bottom edge has been folded up carefully, so that the scroll design aligns as closely as possible with the tapestry beneath.

The Yellow Bedroom (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

The Yellow Bedroom tapestries

Located beyond the drawing room, this bedroom was in a part of the house used by the Delaval family rather than their guests. Conservation showed that the Trojan War tapestries here were of a poorer quality, and that they had been sacrificed to repair the Holly Bedroom tapestries

Yellow Bedroom collage (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

As before though, the most complete tapestry appears on the wall that was best lit, and most visible from the bed. This shows that the position each tapestry was hung in was carefully managed during John’s renovations, in order to amplify their strengths and hide their faults.

Holly Bedroom Repairs (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

Man of the house…

The alterations that John ordered to these two tapestry rooms reveal that he saw his house as a showcase of his social standing. Tapestries in the ‘best bedchamber’ were repaired by sacrificing tapestries in a family bedroom, but not vice versa, showing the former’s precedence. 

The Drawing room (21st Century) by Leah Warriner-WoodUniversity of Lincoln: College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities

…and house of the man

The relationship between rooms is also notable. Heirloom tapestries in the bedrooms showed that John came from an established landed family with inherited wealth, while an up-to-date drawing room next door showed off his fashionable tastes, funded by his own, independent wealth.

Becoming Sir John Delaval at Doddington Hall

All of those things were necessary for climbing the social ladder in the 18th century. Doddington Hall’s tapestry rooms therefore offer an excellent insight into how John Delaval used his home to showcase his social status, around the time of his elevation to the nobility. 

Credits: Story

Leah Warriner-Wood | Senior Lecturer | Conservation of Cultural Heritage 

Trained as an objects conservator, and with an interest in material culture studies and textiles, Leah’s doctoral research characterises the 18th-century curation of tapestry interiors at Doddington Hall, Lincolnshire, as an example of the ‘material self-fashioning’ of an elite masculinity. She shows that tapestry – which had been both a physical and cultural requisite in high-status houses before and during the early modern period – retained cultural capital beyond this, even as its earlier material function declined. Employed as part of carefully curated decorative interior schemes in which articulations of the self are embedded, Leah’s research thus shows tapestry to be a valuable resource for research into historic interior decorative practices, cultural identity, and the material culture of the long 18th century. 

Tapestries at Doddington Hall: Collecting, Conservation and Display

Tapestry Research Spotlight | University of Lincoln

Doddington Hall

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites