From the 16th century, the peninsula jutting out between lakes Galvė and Skaistis, on which the Užutrakis Estate was built, as well as the surrounding lands, were under the care of the Tartars.
Some distance from the mansion stood about 20 stone and wooden buildings: houses for the gardener, farm labourers, a ferryman (the family crossed the Galvė and Skaistic isthmus by raft), a distillery, forge, stable etc.
His wife Duchess Jadwiga Swiętopułk-Czetwertyńska and son Andrzej Tyszkiewicz (1899-1977) returned to Užutrakis after the war.
After the Russians occupied the Vilnius region, Duchess Jadwiga Swiętopułk-Czetwertyńska fled to Kretinga Manor, the home of her husband's brother, Alexander.
Copies of sculptures representing Roman gods made by the French artist Charles-Antoine Coysevox, as well as antique-style busts and vases, all vanished.
The geometric-shaped flowerbeds, avenues of linden trees, ornamental gardens, marble vases and sculptures harmonize with scenic landscape elements that include hills, more than 20 ponds of varying sizes and shapes, and local and introduced greenery.