Castle Drogo in the Teign Valley Drewsteignton, Devon, England. Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens in granite to create Julius Drewe's "ancestral home". Grade I listed. Building completed in the 1920s.

Castle Drogo

England
England

Country house in Devon, England

Key Information

Construction

1911–1930

Castle Type

Neo-romantic castle

Current Status

Intact

Historical Overview

Castle Drogo is a country house and mixed-revivalist castle near Drewsteignton, Devon, England. Constructed between 1911 and 1930, it is the last castle built in England. The client was Julius Drewe, the hugely successful founder of the Home and Colonial Stores. Drewe chose the site in the belief that it formed part of the lands of his supposed medieval ancestor, Drogo de Teigne. The architect was Edwin Lutyens, then at the height of his career. Lutyens lamented Drewe's determination to have a castle but nevertheless produced one of his finest buildings. The architectural critic Christopher Hussey described the result: "The ultimate justification of Drogo is that it does not pretend to be a castle. It is a castle, as a castle is built, of granite, on a mountain, in the twentieth century". The castle was given to the National Trust in 1974, the first building constructed in the twentieth century that the Trust acquired. The castle is a Grade I listed building. The gardens are Grade II* listed on the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.

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