Hollin Hall, Cumbria

Hollin Hall is a country house in Crook in Cumbria. It is a Grade II listed building.[1]

Hollin Hall

History

The hall, formerly called Thwatterden Hall,[2] is a 14th-century pele tower with crow-stepped gables, built by Robert Philipson with a 16th or 17th century main block and a 17th or 18th century West wing attached.[1] In the mid 17th century Captain Myles Philipson commanded the local forces from Westmorland under Lord Clifford and then, a few years later, Captain Bernard Philipson served with the English army in Holland.[3] The house was acquired by the Braithwaite family, then by the Moore family and after that by the Fleming family who rented it out to farmers.[3] It remains a farmhouse.[2]

gollark: In an actual language you would have `do` and `apply-adjective` and such be one syllable.
gollark: In that form it's basically just a tree written differently, but you could do `dup` and `rot` and `swp` and whatever instead of spoken languages' `this` and `that` backrefs.
gollark: (with shorter words, practically speaking)
gollark: Most languages work as trees, but you could reformat something like `cyan apioforms rotate perpendicularly` as `apioform plural cyan apply-adjective rotate perpendicular apply-adverb do`.
gollark: What if *stack-based* conlang?

See also

References

  1. "Hollin Hall, Crook". British listed buildings. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  2. "Crook". Welcome to Windermere. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  3. "The Copper Kettle" (PDF). Staveley and District History Society. Retrieved 25 July 2015.

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