Address: Tiendweg 6 Zeist
National monument
• 1632 | Manor house Stoetwegen size of 346 morgen (approximately 346 hectares/3,460,000 m2) a fief (in loan) held from the Sticht (territory of the Bishops of Utrecht) and originally extended all the way to the Kromme Rijn.
The name Wulperhorst most likely comes from the Van Wulven family, a member of which was an official in the service of the Bishop of Utrecht and who founded the adjacent Blikkenburg Castle around 1300.
Owners Wulperhorst
• 1682 | Originally, the Wulperhorst estate (Wulvenhorst) was a fief (in loan) from Hofstede Hardenbroek in Nederlangbroek. A plot of land, 12½ morgen in size, with a house on it, called Wulverhorst, in the court Stoetwegen, south: the convent Vrouwenklooster, north: Arnout Pietersz. (1695: Bosch?).
• 1735 | Gerlach Frederick baron van der Capellen (1697-1754), lord of Mijdrecht and Papekop (x 1732) Catharina van der Capellen - de Leeuw (1711-1762)
• 1762 | Willem Nicolaas baron de Pesters (1717-1794), Lord of Wulperhorst, leader of the Orange party in Utrecht (x 1753) Isabella de Pesters - van Westhreenen (1728-1809)
• 1772 | Construction of Huys Wulperhorst with ice cellar and design of a garden with a formal park layout, a star forest, an orchard, a deciduous forest, and a Grand Canal to the Kromme Rijn by P.H. Copijn
• 1794 | Nicolaas baron de Pesters (1754-1806) (x 1778 ?) Jacoba Margaretha Harskamp (1755-1827)
• 1807 | Dowager widow Jacoba Margaretha Harskamp (1755-1827) (x 1807) Jan Anthonij baron Taets van Amerongen (1769-1828), lord of Woudenberg, member of the Provincial Executive of Utrecht, marshal of the Nederkwartier, state councilor i.b.d. and chamberlain of King William I
• 1829 | Auction Wulperhorst together with the farmstead De Hoef, as well as the farmstead De Rumst, the knightly farmstead Blikkenburg and the farmsteads Stoetwegen and Zomerdijk
• 1829 | Jonkheer Jan Elias Huydecoper van Maarsseveen (1798-1865) (x 1820) Maria Isabella Anna Josine Charlotte baroness Taets van Amerongen (1802-1859)
• 1830 | Demolition of house from 1772
• 1831 | Construction of large landscape park by Jan David Zocher (1791-1870)
• 1843 | Construction of railway line Utrecht-Arnhem with expropriation that cuts through the country estate Wulperhorst
• 1848 | Construction of Hunting Lodge ’t Chalet Wulperhorst
• 1858 | Construction of new house commissioned by Jonkheer Johan Lodewijk Reinier Anthonie Huydecoper (1822-1886) (x 1849) Louise Ernestine van Hardenbroek (1827-1909) to a design by architect Samuel Adrianus van Lunteren (1813-1877)
• 1858 | Laying of the foundation stone by son Jan Elias Huydecoper (1850-1916)
• 1909 | Jonkheer Hendrik Maximiliaan Huydecoper (1857-1950) unmarried and brother of Jonkheer Johan Lodewijk Reinier Anthonie
• 1940-1945 | Requisitioned by the German Luftwaffe
• 1950 | Sale of house to the State of the Netherlands (Ministry of Defence)
• 1952 | Swagermankamp with the Staff Command Air Defense (CTV)
• 1973-1991 | Swagermankamp with the Staff Command Tactical Air Force (CTL)
• 1993-1994 | Temporary Reception Center (TOC) for approximately 300 Yugoslavian refugees
• 2001 | Demolition of barracks to make way for nature and transfer to Het Utrechts Landschap
• 2002 | Wibi Soerjadi (1970) sale of house with buildings on leasehold
• 2018 | Panta Rhei Real Estate Amsterdam with 25 luxury day and night care apartments and a care hotel by Domus Valuas