Woodhall Park

Woodhall Park is a Grade I listed[1] country house near Watton-at-Stone, Hertfordshire, England.

[4] Describing Leverton's work at Woodhall Park, Nikolaus Pevsner said that his interiors "have a style, decidedly their own, different from Adam's or Chambers's or Holland's" their character coming out most clearly in the central staircase hallway, "profusely but very delicately decorated with plaster à la antique".

A weir was constructed to hold back the River Beane to create a "broadwater" within sight of the house.

[10] As a young man, Joseph Paxton was employed at Woodhall Park by Samuel Smith.

[11] At that time, the garden appears to have had good facilities for fruit growing,[2] one of the activities for which Paxton later achieved fame when working for the Duke of Devonshire.

In the 19th century the Smith family diverted the route of the turnpike between Watton and Ware, moving it further from the house.

Boundary wall with ladder stile