Places to visit whilst
staying at The Black Swan
Shandy Hall (2 miles)
Shandy Hall is situated in the pretty little village of Coxwold
and it was here between 1760 and 1767 that the witty and
eccentric parson Laurence Sterne wrote Tristram Shandy and A
Sentimental Journey. Sterne accepted the position of parson at
Coxwold in 1760 and moved from York with his wife to rent the
old parsonage house close by the church which he soon renamed
Shandy Hall. The house is thought to have been built in 1430,
but was considerably altered in the 17th century, Sterne carried
out his own improvements, including a new garden front. Sterne
died in London on the 18th March 1768.
The badly dilapidated Shandy Hall was bought by the Laurence
Sterne Trust in 1967 and after a lengthy restoration was opened
to the public in 1973 by its honorary curators Kenneth and Julia
Monkman. The two acre garden which surrounds the house has been
restored and developed by Julia Monkman, including a wild garden
created from a 19th century disused quarry. The garden has been
opened for the National Gardens Scheme since 1982 and was
featured in Country Life in 1991. Shandy Hall houses the the
worlds foremost collection of editions of Sterne's novels plus a
varied background of contemporary prints and paintings
illustrating his work.
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