After driving past Beaulieu for years and vaguely filing it under "place full of old people looking at teaspoons", we finally went last weekend while staying in the New Forest in the motorhome.
Over thirty quid each to get in, which initially produces the sort of involuntary facial expression normally associated with unexpected dental work. But I have to admit, it was worth it. An additional benefit of Gift Aiding the fee is that you can return to the National Motor Museum for free within a year.
The National Motor Museum alone justified the trip, and that is before the house, gardens and the strange realisation that Beaulieu is what happens when an aristocratic family decides not to embalm itself for public consumption.
That is the key difference. Most stately homes now feel as though the owners popped out in 1893 to buy a pheasant and never returned. Everything preserved behind ropes by curators speaking in reverential tones about occasional tables. The whole place pickled in aspic.
Beaulieu feels lived in.
Not "lived in" in the sense of muddy Labradors and an unpaid gas bill, obviously. More that the family still appear to regard the house as theirs rather than as a museum exhibit temporarily entrusted to them by a committee in sensible shoes.
Rooms evolve because somebody fancied changing them. One bedroom looked like a circus tent designed during a mildly unhinged lunch break. Another was entirely motoring themed, complete with vintage car wallpaper and enough motoring memorabilia to suggest somebody in the family casually keeps Bugattis in the shrubbery. Another resembled the sort of room where a wealthy Edwardian botanist might quietly poison rivals with exotic orchids.
None of it had the dead hand of heritage curation on it.
And oddly enough, that feels more historically authentic.
Aristocrats were forever ripping bits out and modernising things anyway. Georgians wrecked Tudor interiors. Victorians covered everything in wallpaper and sorrow. Every generation altered the place to suit itself. The National Trust merely freezes houses at whichever date the committee happened to prefer.
The Montagus also deserve credit for realising, earlier than most aristocratic families, that the answer to catastrophic post-war estate economics was not surrender, but monetisation. "People seem to like old cars. Let us charge them."
And fair play to them, it worked.
The Montagus themselves occupy that interesting layer of the aristocracy where the title is respectable rather than earth-shatteringly grand, but the family connections spread everywhere. Earls, dukes, politicians, military figures, royalty-adjacent people who probably all know which fork to use for pheasant. The British aristocracy was essentially centuries of strategic mergers conducted through shooting parties and daughters called Arabella. What Beaulieu perhaps demonstrates better than some grander houses is that adaptability mattered more than rank. Quite a few loftier families ended up selling paintings, silver and roof lead to survive. The Montagus put racing cars in a museum, opened the gates and carried on living there.
The motor museum itself is superb because it still feels enthusiast driven rather than corporate. There was the extraordinary Volkswagen XL1 looking like somebody in the 1930s imagined the future and then accidentally got it right. Tiny frontal area, enclosed rear wheels and the sort of obsessive streamlining that makes modern SUVs look faintly ridiculous. It apparently managed around 300mpg in ideal conditions, which is both deeply impressive and slightly annoying because it demonstrates that the car industry could pursue radical efficiency when it really wants to.
Nearby sat Donald Campbell's Bluebird CN7, looking less like a car and more like an artillery shell designed by an aerodynamic cult. The whole land speed record era now seems gloriously insane. Britain once looked at gas turbines and deserts and concluded that the obvious thing to do was strap a man inside and see what happened.
Then there was the Brough Superior combination, all polished alloy and beautifully engineered menace, parked as though Lawrence of Arabia might return at any moment demanding fresh oil and a cigarette. Alongside it sat wonderfully improbable early motorcycles and motorised contraptions from the dawn of powered transport, including one tiny post-WWI scooter-like device that prompted Hayley to observe, "That'll never catch on."
That is the joy of museums like this. They quietly remind you that humans are utterly hopeless at predicting which technologies will transform society. Every revolution initially looks faintly ridiculous. Cars looked absurd beside horses. Early motorcycles resembled bicycles suffering a mechanical incident. The first scooters looked like mobility aids for adventurous vicars.
And then there was the SOE exhibition.
Wonderful British understatement everywhere. The Special Operations Executive studying methods of "ungentlemanly warfare".
Not evil warfare. Not horrifying warfare. Merely slightly bad manners.
One section described "subversive, corrupting propaganda" as though somebody had distributed rude jazz records at a church fete.
Meanwhile these people were blowing up railways, running sabotage operations and dropping agents into occupied Europe.
And of course Beaulieu itself was involved in wartime training. Which somehow feels perfectly British. Medieval abbey, stately home, racing cars, espionage training, tea shop.
The whole place has personality, which is increasingly rare. So many attractions now feel focus-grouped into sterile blandness. Beaulieu still feels as though actual enthusiasts and mildly eccentric aristocrats are involved somewhere in the machinery.
Mind you, there were omissions.
No Triumph GT6.
No Mercedes R129 500SL.
Frankly, I can only assume they are embarrassed by displaying perfection publicly.




























