Colonel Rolleston's Bee House


The bee-house at Watnall Hall
is of interest as it shows the attitude of the times when Lancelot Rolleston was a young man. It was expected in the high Victorian era that scientific progress was to be advanced by worthy individuals, rather than by teams - for example the team lead by the American, Thomas Edison, later in the period. Lancelot Rolleston decided to study bees. He had the bee-house, as he called it, built in such a way that he could sit comfortably inside with a chair and desk, and watch the bees through glass windows let into the rear of each individual hive.
To quote from Mr. Jacks,

"The boxes in which the insects deposit their honey are so arranged that they cannot fly about in the interior of the apartment, whilst their operations can be watched and studied through glass. So the bee-house serves a double purpose, besides being an ornament to the garden." Meaning, as an architect put it 85 years later, "A country gentleman esteemed for his courtesy and geniality, writing his letters among that gentle buzzing in a world that seems now to have been forever summer."

He became quite an expert and is supposed to have written books on the subject, although an example has yet to be found. According to Mr. J.A. Cooper, interviewed in 1970, the Colonel even had some of the original Nottingham Crocuses, "blue in colour" brought from, the Meadows area of Nottingham, and had them planted in the field opposite to the Hall Farm side of Narrow Road "covering an area the size of a cricket pitch" for his bees to collect their honey. A painting of them used to be in the entrance hall of the, now demolished, Nottingham General Hospital.

Nottingham from The Meadows at Crocus time, 1890 by Thomas William Hammond

Why Do Bees Like Crocus Flowers? Careful selection of your crocus varieties enables you to provide food from autumn through to late winter or early spring. As well as nectar, crocuses provide hungry bees with plenty of pollen. Honey bees certainly visit crocus flowers. Those that flower in late winter to early spring will provided much needed sustenance to foraging worker honey bees, keen to replenish the colony food stores following the cool winter months. It's worth remembering that honey bees will brave very cool temperatures in order to find food for the colony.

There is a very strange story connected with the bees and the bee-house, told by Mr. Peart, the last gardener at the Hall. He joined the staff after WW2 ended in 1945, so he never knew Colonel Rolleston at all. He was told of an event by Mr. Justice the chauffeur who looked after the bees following the death of the Colonel in 1941. It goes like this. "He said that when the colonel died, Lady Maud said to him, "Now look, Justice", (you never got called Mr. Justice - just Justice or whatever) "you're to go around each hive, give them a tap and say your Master's dead ', “and be said 'I felt as daft as a brush, but I did it'.

In 1949, Lady Maud died, and Mr. Justice had retired, so Mr. Peart was in charge of the hives, but “I didn't go and tap round them - no way - but there was a man in the village, a Mr. Bill Swells, and he were a big bee man so I said, "You can have those bees Bill, I don't want anything more to do with them. They're more trouble to me than they're worth, so get them out". But when he came up- you can believe it or believe it not- there was no sign of any disease, no mice, no moths, no reason, but those bees were dead - and they'd got plenty of food, but they'd gone. He got one hive that's all. The rest had died. Coincidence or whatever, but it's strange isn't it, but that happened."
After the bees died, Mr. Peart removed the roof from the bee-house, placed hot pipes from the saddle room inside, and turned the structure into a greenhouse. One feels that he didn't like bees as "them bees’d go for me and I'd react to it.”

There are many stories in the village about the trouble they caused when swarming in the wrong place. They nearly always seemed to swarm on to the high yew hedge round the old cock-fighting pit, but they also ended up in the rose pergola and once even interrupted a Sunday School lesson taking place on the lawn as it was a hot day. What Lady Maud said on that occasion is not recorded!

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UPDATE March 2024

A particular book from Watnall Hall's library gives us a clue about one of Sir Lancelot Rolleston's more unusual hobbies and about a remarkable building that once stood in the hall gardens. The book is so old it's pages are made from vellum. It is an original 1623 copy of "The Feminine Monarchie or The History of the Bees by Schoolmaster Charles Butler".
The Watnall book was sold at the 1954 auction of the hall's contents for an undisclosed fee. A second edition of the book sold for £4800 in 2021.
Like many educated Victorian men, Sir Lancelot adopted a particular line of amateur scientific enquiry. His interest was in bee-keeping and he had a remarkable "bee house" built in the grounds of Watnall Hall inside which he could sit and watch the bees through glass surrounded by the soothing sound of the bees' workaday buzzing. 
It is described in Leonard Jack's 1881 book Great Houses as... "its thatched bee-house, full of murmurous sound. Of that bee-house I made a closer inspection. It was designed by Mr. Rolleston, who takes considerable interest in bee culture, and is large enough inside for a study. As a matter of fact, Mr. Rolleston occasionally shares this house with the bees. The boxes in which the insects deposit their honey are so arranged that they cannot fly about in the interior of the apartment, whilst their operations can be watched and studied through glass. So the bee-house serves a double purpose, besides being an ornament to the garden. Whilst the bees are making their honey, and arranging their domestic matters in the glass cases, Mr. Rolleston is writing his letters at a table, and the apartment is filled with a soothing sound."
The Butler bee book itself is particularly important, being "...the greatest early British bee book and contains the best account of skep beekeeping which is available today" (British Bee Books). It is the first edition to contain both the woodcut frontispiece and the 4-part madrigal which was an attempt to capture the piping of the queen at swarming time. 
Butler's musical interpretation of the Queen bee

For a modern take on the bee house here's my son's glass-topped Minecraft version! Nice to see the younger generations learning about it, bee-keeping is very important in Minecraft ...






Sources: RA Horton's book "Watnall Hall and the Rolleston Family"; 1954 auction catalogue.
Forum Auctions 2021
The Garden's Trust also have a page with pictures of the very few bee houses that have survived and also talk about Butler's bee book... click here for their article

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