“Drayton is one of the best-kept secrets of the English country-house world,” architectural historian Gervase Jackson-Stops wrote in AD’s January 1991 issue. “Where the atmosphere of other great British houses has been marred by tourist buses and shops, Drayton has remained hidden, mysterious, rarely open, guarding its privacy.” That same level of concealment shrouding the circa-1300 Northamptonshire estate has remained mostly intact—until it was outed as the filming location of Emerald Fennell’s popular 2023 dark comedy, Saltburn.
Fennell chose the 127-room house (which has sold exactly once in its long history, way back in 1361) to serve as the film’s location in part because it wasn’t well-known to the public: “It needed to be something that hadn’t been used before. This hadn’t been photographed even, let alone put on film,” she told AD. “We always wanted the exact sense that it is a real place.” (Clearly “hadn’t been photographed” is an exaggeration, but this home flew under the radar when compared to popular filming locations like Hatfield House.)
Everyone involved in Saltburn’s production was required to keep the location’s identity a secret, but in August, Tatler identified the historic manor from the film’s trailer. Since then, fans of the thriller have traveled to the site in droves.