Kidlandlee is now a sprinkling of old outbuildings high in
the Northumberland moors 3 miles north of Alwinton – some of them having been
redeveloped, others are in the process of being brought back to life. But the
substantial, and now long-gone, building you see above was once the
centre-point of the remote estate. It was known simply as Kidland, or
Kidlandlee, and, though it looks like a mansion, it was, in fact, merely a
shooting lodge.
In its Edwardian heyday, Kidlandlee was the highest
‘mansion’ in England at almost 1,300ft. It was constructed in the 1890s by
Christopher J.Leyland, whose prime residence was Haggerston Castle a little
south of Berwick. Leyland was an inveterate builder of big things and lavished
his wealth on both his main home and this incredible recreational lodge in the
foothills of the Cheviots. Some say that the construction of the lofty lodge
was the result of a bet to build the highest mansion in the land!
Having bought the plot from the Hon F.W.Lambton, he set
about building his little summer house – which ultimately was to consist of two
halls, dining room, drawing room, smoking room, 13 bedrooms and 6 bathrooms.
Externally, there were several outbuildings together with a man-made lake and a
croquet lawn.
After Leyland’s passing in the mid-1920s, his son, hampered
by crippling death duties, sold off much of his father’s estate, including the
Kidlandlee mansion. It fell into the hands of the Lee family, but by 1950 it
had become unmanageable and the decision was taken to demolish it. It was
spectacularly destroyed in 1956 by explosives, leaving a few outbuildings
intact. Around the same time planting began of the surrounding Kidland Forest,
which now gives the spot an even remoter feel, it still only being accessible
by forest tracks.
Note: Leyland made a name for himself as the man
behind the Leylandii tree (see here),
and also as the captain of the pioneering steam turbine, Turbinia.