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Buscot Park was built by Edward Loveden Loveden between
1779 and 1783. The house is a dignified example of the late eighteenth-century
taste for Italianate country houses, inspired by the architecture of the
great Renaissance architect, Andrea Palladio. A subsequent owner, Robert
Tertius Campbell, died bankrupt in 1887, having spent his large fortune
on turning Buscot into a model agricultural estate. In 1956 the Buscot Park estate was bequeathed
to the National Trust, and the contents of the house were subsequently
transferred to the Trustees of the Faringdon Collection. The present Lord
Faringdon lives at Buscot Park, administering the house and grounds on
behalf of the National Trust. He continues to acquire new works by contemporary
artists to enhance the Faringdon Collection. |