Waingroves

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Waingroves
Derbyshire

Waingroves Hall c. 1190
Location
Grid reference: SK412493
Location: 53°2’24"N, 1°23’12"W
Data
Post town: Ripley
Postcode: DE5
Dialling code: 01773
Local Government
Council: Amber Valley
Parliamentary
constituency:
Amber Valley

Waingroves is a large village in Derbyshire, some two miles away from the town of Ripley. In woodland to the south of the village, there are remains of a colliery site.

Waingroves Hall

The land at "Waingrif" (Waingroves) was donated by Ralph fitzStephen to the Knights Hospitaller in the early 12th century. The "deed of gift" cites the date 1147, however another document reveals contact between the Abbot of Darley Abbey and the Knights Hospitaller, with regards to Waingroves, as early as 1121.[1]

The land was donated for the foundation of a preceptory of the Knights Hospitaller; however there is dispute as to whether one was ever constructed. Of those that believe a preceptory did exist, it is accepted that it only had a very short life: founded around 1147 and "supplanted" by another Hospitaller Preceptory in Derbyshire -Yeaveley Preceptory.[1][2]

Following its acquisition by Yeaveley, a manor was constructed which was leased, along with the preceptory's land, to lay tenants. This, and the small time-frame of potential existence, has led some to argue that a preceptory was never constructed at Waingroves, and that the land and the manor constructed by the Hospitallers was for purely secular use.[3] The land was tenanted throughout Yeaveley Preceptory's ownership.

The manor passed into secular hands at the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1543, when the Order of the Knights Hospitaller was dissolved and its assets passed to the Crown.[3]

The site of the manor was later used for the construction of what would become known as Waingroves Hall. The present building, now divided into "Waingroves Hall" and "Waingroves Hall Farm".[4]

The Hall does not appear to incorporate any remains of the Manor house of the Knights Hospitaller: the earliest fragments date from 1690, with most of the house dating from 1800 when the house was rebuilt,[3][4] for Richard Clayton.

The Hall was remodelled in the 1790s and was sold in the 1960s for £68,000.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Waingroves)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Thomas Tanner (1744). Notitia monastica. London. p. 80. 
  2. David Knowles and R Neville Hadcock (1953). Mediæval religious houses : England and Wales. p. 247. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 T Bulmer & Co (1895). Topographical History and Directory of Derbyshire. p. 579. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 National Monuments Record: No. 315714 – Waingroves Hall

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