Painshill Park
Painshill 18th century landscape garden was created between 1738 and 1773, by the Hon. Charles Hamilton.
Born in Dublin in 1704, Hamilton, the ninth son and 14th child of the Sixth Earl of Abercorn, embarked on two Grand Tours across Europe before acquiring the land at Painshill. With ancient artefacts in his luggage and Italian romance and natural beauty in his head – along with exotic plants seen on his tours – his vision was to create ‘living paintings’ in a new style of magical garden.
Inspired by Renaissance art and his Grand Tours, Hamilton went on to create a sequence of breathtaking and surprising vistas at Painshill. The landscapes form living works of art into which Hamilton placed follies for dramatic effect.
Autumn

Painshill Park Vineyard
A view of the exterior, interior and ceiling of a folly.
A wooden bridge in Painshill Park.
Exterior of the Italian Grotto
Interior of the Italaian Grotto
Painshill Park
Bridges at Painshill Park
Autumn Colours
The Ruined Abbey Folley
A Folley at Painshill Park
Toadstool
Autumn Colours
Autumn Leaves
Swans at Painshill Park
Painshill Park Waterwheel
Tree Bark
Ferns, Pine Cones and Toadstools.
The Signal Tower
Autumn Colours
Toadstools
Autumn Leaves