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A
mid-nineteenth-century view of the Loveden house and the maturing landscape
(lithograph by J S Kell)
J S Kells mid-nineteenth-century lithograph of Buscot Park shows
the mansion in its mature setting some seventy years after its completion.
Further changes and additions were prevented by financial constraints
and Robert Campbell, the new owner from 1859, seems to have cared more
for his experiments in the industrialisation of the estate than in changing
the design. A number of anonymous and finely executed sketches have been
found, some dated August 1859, which indicate that Campbell was toying
with various ideas for reworking the mansion, deploying an eclectic mix
of Italianate towers, mixed with Gothic and Elizabethan windows.
In the event, Campbells enhancements to the house were far more
modest, consisting of a new porch and flight of steps to the south front,
and the addition of gabled dormers and balustrading to the eighteenth-century
parapet. The orangery was demolished in order to create Italianate terraced
gardens to the east and north of the house, with broad paths and geometrically
shaped lawns, supported by bastion walls, and embankments. A new approach
to the house was created by laying out a new carriage drive from the south
front of the house leading eastwards through woodland and offering fleeting
glimpses both of the house and of the lake.

A woodcut of around 1860, by Laurence Davies, showing the new porch and
steps added to the front of the house by Robert Campbell

An anonymous architect's sketch (probably executed
around August 1859) illustrating one of the grander schemes considered
but mercifully never implemented by Robert Campbell for
the enhancement of the house

Campbells extensive alterations to the parkland surrounding the
mansion, including the creation of the reservoir and a new approach to
the house, can be seen in this Ordnance Survey map of 1876
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