Rhinefield House Hotel & Spa

Location: Brockenhurst, Hampshire

Rhinefield House is a stunning country house hotel set in forty acres of peaceful and secluded gardens in the heart of the New Forest near Brockenhurst and now you can experience a luxurious stay there.

This imposing four-star hotel, known as the 'Jewel in the Forest', stands at the end of a long sweeping drive, shadowed by Canadian redwood and copper beech trees and lined with rhododendrons, making it the ideal retreat for a romantic break.

Rhinefield House is a member of the exclusive Hand Picked Hotels, a collection of country house hotels renowned for superb food, fine wines and excellent service in stylish surroundings.

All its 50 comfortable and stylish bedrooms are named after locations, flora and fauna in the New Forest, and the excellent facilities include indoor and outdoor swimming pools.

Guests can dine al fresco on the terrace overlooking the beautiful lake and grounds or choose from either the award-winning Armada Restaurant with its magnificent fireplace carving of the Armada, which took nine years to complete from a solid block of oak some four feet thick, or the Brasserie, offering contemporary dining in stylish surroundings overlooking the ornamental ponds.

For more information about the hotel please visit their web site

Rhinefield House Hotel & Spa Photo

Saturday 16th & Sunday 17th November 2024

Event type: Murder Mystery Weekend
Plot: (New Autumn Weekend)
1 Night Stay: From £265 per person

These prices are based on two people sharing a standard double or twin bedroom

History

<i>Rhinefield...Where some antique oak, itself a grove, spreads its soft umbrage o?er the sunny glade</i> (William Wordsworth 1793)

Although Rhinefield House has existed in its present form since the 1880?s there have been dwellings on the site since the "New Forest" was first proclaimed by William Rufus in about 1097. To him the forest represented an area, conveniently close to his capital of Winchester, in which he could pursue his favourite sport of hunting. The creation of a Royal hunting preserve placed the area under "Forest Law" which curtailed the liberty of the indigenous peasants and threatened drastic punishment for interference with the potential quarry or their environment. Since this law precluded fencing, which would obstruct the free run of the game, domestic animals were allowed extensive grazing rights, which exist to this day. The forest was divided for administrative purposes into areas and "walks" each supervised by a keeper (an office rather more exalted than its modern equivalent). Keepers lived in a series of lodges, of which Rhinefield was the first to be built in 1709. The use of the Forest as an exclusive hunting ground waned during the reign of Charles II and the office of "Keeper of the Walk" became a Grace and Favour appointment. By 1859 Rhinefield, which had been the site of a succession of keepers? lodges, had become the abode of a Forest Nurseryman who was responsible for the creation of the Ornamental Drive and the planting of many conifers in the Rhinefield grounds.

In 1877, many of the Crown Lands were "privatised". Grace and Favour appointments lapsed and vacant lodges were leased to private individuals. Rhinefield passed to the hands of the Walker family, who owned Eastwood Colliery, immortalised in the novels of D.H. Lawrence. In 1885 the only daughter of the family became engaged to a Lieutenant Munro RN, and her father?s engagement present was £250,000 with which to build a family home at Rhinefield. After their marriage in 1887 the couple adopted the name Walker-Munro and supervised the construction of an impressive country seat comprising the Great House, a Hunting Lodge, Stables, Gardener?s Bothy and a Gate Lodge. (There was even enough change left over to build a modest "beach-hut" which is best known today as the White House at Milford on Sea).
The Great House contains four suites for the four daughters who were part of the family plan, to which Mother Nature was unfortunately not privy, since the lady of the house gave birth to a son in 1889. Her frustration, aggravated by the news that she could not bear another child, was to be a dominant influence on the family?s future. The mother took little part in her unfortunate son?s early upbringing, which was left largely to servants. After a public school education and service with the Army in France during World War 1, Major Ian Walker-Munro emigrated to Kenya to become a farmer with financial assistance from his father. He married in 1919 and had four sons. Controversy seemed to follow the Walker-Munro family. For example, they styled themselves "Lord of the Manor at Rhinefield", a wholly fictitious title which bought them into conflict with another local family, the Morants, who were official Lords of the Manor of Brockenhurst and Rhinefield. Their mutual antipathy even extended to a refusal to worship in the same church and, in 1903, the Walker-Munros decided to build a church of their own (now St Saviour?s by the Watersplash in Brockenhurst). However this venture was short lived as Mrs Walker-Munro quarrelled with the incumbent, a relative whom they had themselves installed in the living, and work ceased. The full significance of this only became apparent on the death of her husband in 1923. The church, being unfinished, was not licensed for burials so, rather than let him lie near the Morants, she buried him in a copse on Ober farm, which at the time was the home farm.

Mrs Walker-Munro was now a very wealthy woman and became the benefactress of many charities, to which she intended to leave her fortune to the exclusion of her estranged son. However, even this plan misfired. Having revoked one will and not yet signed its replacement, she died, effectively intestate and the unthinkable happened - the whole estate passed to her son. Frustrated to the end, she joined her husband in the Ober Farm in 1934. Rhinefield remained in the possession of her family until after the death of her son in 1950, when crippling death duties forced his widow to dispose of it.

There followed a period of uncertainty for Rhinefield, during which several schemes for conversion to flats or a hotel foundered for one reason or another, and the one relatively successful venture was a private school which occupied the house for ten years. In 1972 Mr Oliver Cutts, who made considerable progress in refurbishing the house and grounds, but whose plans did not win approval of the local planning authority, bought the freehold. So in 1982 ownership passed to the Nicholas Hotels whose plan to develop Rhinefield into a hotel with conference facilities and several luxury apartments, to be leased on a timeshare basis, was successful. This was followed in 1989 by transfer of ownership to Richard Branson (Virgin Hotels), and an upgrading programme was begun. The oldest part of the house appears to be the fire-back in the central Grand Hall, which bears the date 1653. The previous lodge was demolished to make way for the present house, although the materials were carefully preserved and used in the construction of the present hunting lodge.
The Great House designed by architects Romaine-Walker and Tanner of London, incorporates a mixture of styles, both externally and internally, reflecting the personal tastes which the Walker-Munros acquired in their travels. Thus Tudor combines with Gothic architecture, while inside, the Grand Hall has many features of the Westminster Hall and the master?s smoking room reproduces the splendour of the Alhambra Palace in Granada. Opinions of this mixture vary, but there can be no doubting the craftsmanship that went into the construction. The house abounds with supreme examples of the art of wood carvers, stone masons, sculptors, plasterers, coppersmiths and even loo makers! The Alhambra room alone took the Spanish workmen, who were bought over specifically for the purpose, two years to build. Other notable features are the Armada carving by Aumonnier with a surrounding by Grinling Gibbons, a ceiling canvas by Fragonnard, and the magnificent wood panelling throughout the house and the Orchestration, which occupies the organ loft in the Grand Hall.

Most of the original features of the house have been retained during the refurbishment and conversion. The Armada is now the Restaurant while the Alhambra forms an extension to the Armada. The principal bedrooms of the house are now two luxurious suites, and the timeshare apartments which occupy the east wing formerly comprised of the daughter?s and guest suites and servant quarters. The hotel accommodation occupies a wing to the west of the house. The grounds of Rhinefield are also a mixture, informal woodland in which native forest trees jostle with more spectacular imports such as the giant redwoods, and the formal terraces, lawns and water features reminiscent of the great French and Italian gardens. Part of the refurbishment programme has been the reinstatement of the gardens to their original splendour, helped and encouraged by the Hampshire Garden Trust which fortunately has plans and photographs of the original layout.

The present owners, Hand Picked Hotels, are confident that, with the completion of the planned programme of refurbishment and modification, they will have achieved the twin aims of restoring Rhinefield House to a condition worthy of its magnificent New Forest setting, while providing unrivalled facilities for both business and pleasure in luxurious surroundings.

Rhinefield House, Brockenhurst. The name means Badger Wood and it is set in the midst of beautiful Crown Forest land and is approached from the main A35 road, Southampton to Bournemouth, by the delightful Ornamental Drive famous for its colourful Azaleas and Rhododendrons. A large Master Keeper?s Lodge stood in Rhinefield Walk, and in 1628 the records show that the Earl of Holland authorised a sum of money to the Woodward (H.M. Keeper of the Timbers) to carry out work on the Great Rhinefield Lodge as it was then called. In 1789, Colonel Haywood, Deputy Warden, occupied the lodge and spent a considerable amount of money on improvements. Eventually Lieutenant Walker-Munro R.N turned the old nursery into pleasure grounds and built the present lovely mansion.

THE ALHAMBRA SMOKING ROOM

The Alhambra Room, of breathtaking beauty, is an exact copy of the Alhambra Palace in Granada, recreated here by Mabel Walker-Munro as a Christmas present for her husband. During their honeymoon he had so admired the then ruined Alhambra that she was determined to recreate this room for his own private use as a smoking room. She therefore instructed her architects to set out and gather materials, including onyx from Persia and coppersmiths of Moorish origin, who were capable of recreating, in England, this unique room. High in the dome one sees beautiful stars in the Venetian glass forming the Star of David. One could liken the vast dome itself to the breast feathers of a peacock. Below is a bronze grille. This was once part of the first air-conditioning of the house, which could either blow hot or cold air, pumped by the great gas engines. The walls of beaten copper with a gesso finish bear the inscriptions "There is no God but God and Mohammed is his prophet", "God loves all men and loves a true believer" and "The heavens and the earth testify to the magnificence of God". The beautiful mosaic floors with onyx pillars tell the story of how the great and good Caliph Harmoum Al Rashid of Baghdad, by making magic from the pentacle (which is seen in the centre of the floor), rescued his twin daughters from the clutches of Ahnzar the Devil who had turned them into flamingos. The magnificent copper and bronze lantern is the full Ruaiyat of Omar Khayyam, both in cameo and intaglio, and on the base a comet whirling through space shows how God created the world, for if one looks, there are six appendages. In six days God created the world and on the seventh he rested. Opposite the doors, the tapestry work of the fine Kalim prayer carpets every stitch a prayer. The doors to the room are inlaid with brass telling the same story as is told in the floor. The tiles on the walls are hand cut and burnt and each show flowers and other symbols of religious significance.

Click on a photo below to see the full size image

Another great murder mystery weekend with The Killing Game and this time we dressed up. We have already booked the next one in April next year at the Rhinefield House hotel and possibly the one at Lymington in October next year, waiting for the plot to be announced.
This was my very first murder mystery event and I absolutely loved it! The cast of actors were stellar and so talented... they really instilled a connection between myself and the characters. They were in character for the whole weekend and were really skilled at answering questions from the attendees. The storyline was gripping with twists and developments that kept it fast paced and kept me guessing... with each twist, it made me question the theories I'd been developing and you just never knew who might drop dead... it was thrilling right up to the very last moment. The fancy dress was good fun too and put everyone in a party mood for the 3-course meal in the evening... Overall, I absolutely loved playing detective for the whole weekend. It's one thing to guess whodunnit whilst watching a crime show but to be fully immersed in the story, seeing drama happening in front of your eyes and guessing along with others is a real thrill and I would love to come again... so much fun!!
What a great weekend, brilliant actors and a great way of meeting new people. Have been going to these events for quite a few years now to different locations and each time we come away having a great time.
Fantastic weekend 100% will do it again with you.
A great big thankyou to the Killing Game for a wonderful professional exciting weekend that had me in stitches from start to finish !! Especially at breakfast as my mum forgot the actors were still in acting mode and tried to have a serious conversation with a very gracious actor. The setting was gorgeous and so apt for the well written and acted out plot, the food delightful and the staff so accommodating - roll on March at Alveston Manor and the new plot, I can't wait!
Just to say thank you for all your efficient organising to make our experience at Rhinefield House Murder Mystery weekend so amazing. The hotel was excellent with friendly staff and lovely food. The actors were very convincing and played their parts very well. So many thanks again for a lovely weekend.
Just wanted to say how much we enjoyed the weekend. All the actors were great - how do they manage to stay in character all weekend? The hotel was wonderful & created a good setting for the murders. We were delighted that nearly all the fellow sleuths joined in and the vast majority wore fancy dress. Very impressed with your organisation of everything. Hope to join in another murder mystery soon.
Just returned home after a great 'murder' at Rhinefield House. This is our third Killing Game event and the experience was as good as ever. The actors were extremely professional and the plot line kept us engaged all the time.
I just wanted to say thank you so much for a lovely fun weekend.The actors were great staying in character all the time and what lovely people. The venue couldn't have been better. Thank you also for contributing to making my son's 30th birthday a very happy occasion.