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Pink Floyd gig mansion Charlton Park near Canterbury put up for sale

An historic country home which once hosted a festival headlined by Pink Floyd has been put on the market for £3.5 million.

The owners of Charlton Park in Bishopsbourne, near Canterbury, have decided to retire and sell up after more than three decades.

Charlton Park mansion sits in more than 100 acres
Charlton Park mansion sits in more than 100 acres

Buyers will get their hands on a spectacular Grade II-listed property popular with filmmakers and wedding couples.

But perhaps its biggest claim to fame is Medicine Ball Caravan - a music festival held in its 100-acre grounds in 1970, with rock legends Pink Floyd taking star billing.

The event, which drew a crowd of just 1,500, also featured The Faces and iconic Canterbury band Caravan.

But it wasn't until 18 years later that Gubby Wales bought the stately home with her first husband Patrick Twigg, who died in 2001.

Now, she and second husband Jack Wales have decided to embark on a quieter life by selling up and downsizing.

The magnificent ballroom
The magnificent ballroom
Pink Floyd at their appearance in Canterbury in 1969
Pink Floyd at their appearance in Canterbury in 1969

Jack said: "It's Gubby who I've had to persuade because she likes to keep busy and is a great organiser.

"But it's a very demanding place to upkeep and hold functions and we are not getting any younger."

The couple have hosted many charity events and concerts at the house, which is also one of Kent's most prestigious wedding venues.

Jack says they will be looking for a smaller home in the Canterbury area, and possibly somewhere in warmer climes to visit.

"The house is probably too big as just a family home, but a new owner may well want to carry on the function business," he said.

The beautiful decor
The beautiful decor

The mansion house boasts 12 bedrooms, two wine cellars and a stunning 40ft ballroom, built in 1810 by Robert Foote, allegedly to entertain the Prince Regent and his mistress Elizabeth, Countess Conyngham.

Agent Strutt and Parker says the first mention of the property is in 1240, but it is likely to have been established by the time the manor of Bishopsbourne was acquired by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 811.

The Tudor core of the present house was built in about 1580 by James Herringe, a wealthy local yeoman.

In 1636 the estate was bought by the Aucher family, who had acquired the rest of the manor of Bishopsbourne at the Reformation.

By 1800 it belonged to the Foote family, who added the Regency facade and the west wing containing the magnificent first floor ballroom. The east wing was added in the 1840s by General Sir Frederick Mulcaster.

The house has many elegant original features
The house has many elegant original features
The kitchen and dining area
The kitchen and dining area
The drawing room
The drawing room

During the Second World War, Charlton Place was requisitioned for the unit responsible for the long-range Boche-Buster anti-invasion gun mounted on a railcar on the line that then ran behind the house, which, in the event, was never needed.

For 20 years after the war it was a Barnado's children's home, until becoming a private house again in 1966.

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