Fry Art Gallery
Art museum · Saffron Walden
English country house
Audley End House is an early 17th-century English country house near to Saffron Walden in north-west Essex. The Jacobean house was built by the first Earl of Suffolk on the site of a Benedictine monastery that had been awarded to his grandfather, chancellor Thomas Audley, during the dissolution of the monasteries. Suffolk demolished his grandfather's Tudor mansion and built a house of palatial proportions in which he entertained King James I.
The house was bought by King Charles II in 1666, but returned to the earls of Suffolk in 1701. Originally consisting of two courts, much of the house was demolished in the 18th century, leaving it about one-third of its original size. The house came into the possession of the Barons Braybrooke at the end of the 18th century and remained with the family for 150 years.
During World War II, the house was used as a base for training Polish SOE agents. After the war, the ninth Lord Braybrooke sold the house and park to the government, although he retained the farms which formed part of the estate. The Ministry of Works opened the house to the public and it is now managed by English Heritage.
Rooms on view to visitors include the great hall, chapel,...