Heytesbury House, Wiltshire: Bombs, Medals and Cricket
Where poet, Siegfried Sassoon, enjoyed one of his lesser known passions
Drivers using the A36 between Salisbury and Warminster may be interested to know that WW1 poet Siegfried Sassoon lived in Heytesbury from the early 1930s. These same Wiltshire drivers may be unsurprised to find that Heytesbury House came with the usual benefits afforded to landed gentry, including a cricket pitch. What might raise eyebrows is that Siegfried was a devotee of leather on willow and delighted in facing down bowlers, standing at his own crease.
Andrew Pinnell is the author of 鈥楽iegfried Sassoon: A celebration of a cricketing man鈥. Andrew鈥檚 grandfather was a Heytesbury boy and worked in the gardens at the Manor when Siegfried bought it in 1933.
鈥淗e went on to be a gamekeeper on the estate but before that he was one of the 鈥榞arden boys鈥 and what they all enjoyed, above all, was a game of cricket on a Saturday鈥, says Andrew. 鈥淪o when this famous war poet came to live at the Manor they were all delighted that there was a cricket aficionado owning the house鈥.
Siegfried lost no time, apparently, in making his love of cricket clear.
鈥淗e put up nets in the garden and would emerge from the house at 2 o鈥檆lock in the afternoon, say, having been up all night writing and then demand that the boys stop working so they could bowl against him in the nets.
However, Andrew鈥檚 family history tells him that Siegfried鈥檚 love of the game outweighed his skills. 鈥淏less him; if he鈥檚 looking down on me now, he wouldn鈥檛 mind me saying this, he was no cricketer of distinction. My grandfather was a quick bowler and he had to slow it up to bowl at Siggie or else he鈥檇 be knocking him over every time!鈥
Moreover, Andrew laughingly says that Sassoon鈥檚 imperious attitude towards batting orders often made itself felt: 鈥淗eytesbury had a strong team around that time, against other parishes and so on. He didn鈥檛 play that often but when he wanted a game, he would wander over and some poor player would have to bow to serfdom, remove himself from the pitch, so Siggie could stand over there and whimsically admire the estate鈥.
For Robert Pulvertaft, step-son to Sassoon鈥檚 only son, George, cricket brought a sense of peaceful refuge to the famous war poet.
鈥淪eigfried often said to his son, George, that he wished he鈥檇 died during the First World War, because in terms of his legacy, he was really treading water for the rest of his life. So, I think cricket was a form of catharsis for Seigfried; a form of gentle combat where the tradition and the rules and the certainty were all predefined.鈥
Robert鈥檚 home, a short drive from the pitch, is littered with memories of Sassoon. There鈥檚 an incomplete, life-size painting of the man, by his wife Hester. It鈥檚 unfinished because their marriage broke up in 1947. The same hat seen in the painting hangs by it. Robert found it in a barn covered in dust and cobwebs.
Given Sassoon鈥檚 well known feelings of opposition to the First World War, it鈥檚 perhaps surprising to see a Short Muzzled Lee Enfield rifle hanging on the wall: 鈥淚t was a standard rifle issued to soldiers in the First and Second World Wars. This one鈥檚 been deactivated so it can鈥檛 fire. This is a sniper variant which Siegfried bought for his son George, so that he could go hunting in Heytesbury Wood.鈥
Robert accepts that this apparent encouragement of violence might seem contradictory to those who know Sassoon best for his anti-war sentiments: 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 not a contradiction, because he was actually pro-war in the sense of patriotism towards his country and, shall we say, contempt for the Germans. It was the conduct and management of the war by senior officers and the politicians that he truly objected to.鈥
Robert says it鈥檚 a comfort to him that Heytesbury鈥檚 cricket pitch is a living reminder of his step-grandfather: 鈥淭he pitch is still there and is still ultimately owned by the Sassoon family, so his legacy continues in the sense that the pitch continues and the Heytesbury & Sutton Veney cricket team continues.鈥
Hopefully, the next time drivers on the A36 see the diminutive white sign for Heytesbury, they might consider visiting the cricket pitch where one of Britain鈥檚 greatest war poets enjoyed the simple pleasures of cricket.
Location: Heytesbury House, Wiltshire BA12 0HG
Image shows Sassoon outside his home, Heytesbury House, courtesy of Imperial War Museums
Presented by Andy Purnell, author of 鈥楽iegfried Sassoon: a celebration of a cricketing man鈥, along with Robert Pulvertaft, step-grandson to Siegfried Sassoon, who used to live 鈥 and enjoy his cricket 鈥 at Heytesbury
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