Walcot Hall

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Walcot Hall
Northamptonshire
Walcott Hall from the Hereward Way - geograph.org.uk - 306707.jpg
Walcot Hall from the public path
Location
Grid reference: TF07900416
Location: 52°37’28"N, 0°24’27"W
History
Built 1678
For: Sir Hugh Cholmondeley
Country house
Carolean
Information

Walcot Hall is a Carolean-Age country house in the hamlet of Southorpe in the Soke of Peterborough in Northamptonshire. It lies is found a mile south of Barnack. The house today is a Grade I listed building.[1]

Walcot Hall entrance

The house is constructed of limestone ashlar in 2 storeys with attic with a rectangular floor plan of 9 by 5 bays and a Collyweston stone roof.[1] It stands in some 120 acres of wooded parkland as part of a 1400-acre agricultural estate.

History

In the Elizabethan period, the estate was owned by the Whetstone family.

The original hall on the site was owned by the Browne family whose members included Robert Browne a Jacobean member of Parliament. In 1662 the Brownes sold it to Bernard Walcot, who in turn sold it to Sir Hugh Cholmondeley c.1674. Sir Hugh built the present house in 1678 in place of the previous building. The architect is uncertain but the house shows the influence of John Webb.[2]

The estate was owned by the Gainsborough family between 1700 and 1720 and then the Nevile family until 1891. It was then sold to the Dearden family who owned it until 1963, when it was purchased by the Dennises.[3] Members of both the Nevile and Dearden families served as High Sheriff of Northamptonshire.

During the Second World War the hall housed the remote operations room for RAF Wittering[4] and was then occupied by the 67th Fighter Wing of the United States Eighth Air Force. Their operations room planned and directed many of the Flying Fortress daylight raids on Germany.

The estate is now a commercial agricultural landholding. The hall is occupied by Darby and Catherine Dennis.[5][6]

References