'Cragside' is a
country house near
Rothbury in
Northumberland,
England. It was the first house in the world to be lit using
hydroelectric power. Built into a rocky hillside above a 4 km² forest garden, it was the country home of
Lord Armstrong and has been in the care of the
National Trust since 1977.
Cragside, named after ''Cragend Hill'' above the house, was built in 1863 as a modest, two-storey country lodge, but was subsequently extended to designs by
Norman Shaw, transforming it into an elaborate mansion in the
Free Tudor style. At one point, the building included an astronomical
observatory and a scientific laboratory.
In 1868, a
hydraulic engine was installed, with water being used to power labour-saving machines such as laundry equipment, a
rotisserie and a hydraulic
lift. In 1870, water from one of the estate's lakes was used to drive a
Siemens dynamo in what was probably the world's first hydroelectric
power station. The resultant electricity was used to power an
arc lamp installed in the Gallery in 1878. The arc lamp was replaced in 1880 by
Joseph Swan's
incandescent lamps in what Swan considered 'the first proper installation' of electric lighting.
The generators, which also provided power for the farm buildings on the estate, were constantly extended and improved to match the increasing electrical demand in the house.
The house is surrounded by one of
Europe's largest
rock gardens, a large number of
rhododendrons, and a large collection of mostly
coniferous
trees, among which one
Douglas-fir is the tallest tree in England, at 59 m tall.
External links
★
Cragside Gardens & Estate information at the National Trust
★
Cragside History and Pictures