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Brinsop Court in Herefordshire housed some famous historical names

Brinsop Court in Herefordshire is the country house that has been home to some famous historical names. Chris Upton takes a look.

Brinsop Court in Herefordshire.(Image: Gemma Williams Photography)

Have you heard the one about the actress, the vicar, the poet and the political economist?

Regrettably I can’t find a joke to put them all in, but I do have a house. A very fine house, in fact, .

Brinsop Court stands in rolling green acres, six or so miles north-west of the city of Hereford. Pevsner describes it as “a felicitously preserved moated manor”, set in its own secluded valley. Preserved doesn’t mean entirely unchanged, mind you. The Middle Ages built it, the Tudors extended, the Georgians re-faced and landscaped it, and the 21st century turned it into self-catering apartments. For a couple of thousand pounds you can even stay there.

Brinsop Court is still a house to work its magic on the hardest of hearts. The diarist-clergyman Francis Kilvert, who visited in 1879, was particularly struck by its picturesque grandeur.

For half a millennium or so Brinsop was in the hands of the Dansey family, who expanded a medieval hall house to wrap around a central courtyard. They added a chapel and probably the moat, too, and buried their kin in the local churchyard half a mile away.

But all good tenancies come to an end and in – Dansey Richard Dansey – sold up and moved away. The man who now purchased Brinsop Court and its 800 acres of land could hardly have been more different. His name was David Ricardo.

If you’ve heard of Ricardo at all, it will be as a writer and classical economist, and one of the forefathers of what we would now call globalism and the free market. Friend and colleague of Adam Smith and James Mill, Ricardo based his economic theory on what he termed “comparative national advantage”, that is, that nations should make and sell what they’re good at, and leave the rest to others. Uncompetitive industries should be left to go to the wall.

Madeleine Carroll and Robert Donat in a still from the Hitchcock classic The 39 Steps.

If Ricardo’s thinking was tough and uncompromising, his personal background was rather different. The son of a Sephardic Jew from Portugal, Ricardo had followed his father into stockbroking, only to be disowned when he married a Quaker and then, as a religious compromise, became a Unitarian.