Storeton Hall

Storeton Hall was a country house in the village of Storeton, Wirral, Merseyside, England. It was built in the 14th century for the Stanley family and consisted of an H-shaped building including a great hall. Only the north wing, a wall of the great hall, and a block between them that contained a chapel, have survived, and have been incorporated into farm buildings. The remains of the hall are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building.

Storeton Hall
Location in Merseyside
LocationStoreton, Wirral, Merseyside, England
Coordinates53.3521°N 3.0453°W / 53.3521; -3.0453
OS grid referenceSJ 305 844
Built14th century
Built forWilliam Stanley
Listed Building – Grade II*
Designated27 December 1962
Reference no.1075385

History

The manor of Storeton came into the possession of the Stanley family, the predecessors of the Earls of Derby, in the 13th century. Prior to this the settlement was inhabited from Viking times along with other sites in the area following the Viking explusion from Dublin in the 10th century. It has a key strategic loci at the center of the wirral peninsula but to date, has not benefitted from a detailed archaeological survey that the history of the site warrented.[1] William Stanley built the hall in the late 14th century, and until about 1480 it was the principal residence of the family.[2] The hall had an H-plan with a great hall, a north wing containing chambers on two storeys, a south service wing, and a block containing a chapel on the ground floor at the corner of the north wing and the great hall. Extensive remains of the hall have been incorporated into farm buildings of Storeton Hall Farm.[1][2]

Architecture

The hall was built with sandstone from Storeton Quarry.[2] Nothing remains of the south service wing. The north wing, the block containing the chapel, and the east wall of the great hall have survived. Farm buildings have been built against the outer side of the east wall of the great hall, making its inner side an outside face.[1][2] The north wing, the roof of which has been lowered, has angle buttresses, a blocked pointed window with a hood mould in the west gable end, and inserted doors and pitch holes on the north and south sides.[3] Inside, in the upper storey, are the remains of a fireplace.[1] The block containing the former chapel has a timber-framed gable containing pigeon holes, and an external staircase.[3] The outer wall of the east wing (the inner wall of the former great hall) contains, from the north, a blocked doorway that gave access to the north wing, traces of two blocked windows, and a blocked doorway with a pointed head.[1][3]

Appraisal

The remains of Storeton Hall were designated a Grade II* listed building on 27 December 1962.[3] Grade II* is the middle of the three grades of listing and is applied to "particularly important buildings of more than special interest".[4] The description in the National Heritage List for England states that "although remaining only in part, the buildings are an interesting medieval survival".[3]

gollark: Electrical/electrochemical inputs?
gollark: What?
gollark: Okay, I finished reading the backlog, I have a vague idea of what this discussion is about and it seems like mostly... weird nonsense.
gollark: 510 new messages? Wow. What *happened*?
gollark: What are you referring to there? People knew the Earth was round for more than two millenia. Some Greek person even worked out its circumference with surprising accuracy in something like 200 BC.

See also

References

  1. Hartwell, Clare; Hyde, Matthew; Hubbard, Edward; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2011) [1971], Cheshire, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, pp. 612–613, ISBN 978-0-300-17043-6
  2. de Figueiredo, Peter; Treuherz, Julian (1988), Cheshire Country Houses, Chichester: Phillimore, p. 272, ISBN 0-85033-655-4
  3. Historic England, "Storeton Hall (1075385)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 16 December 2014
  4. Listed buildings, Historic England, retrieved 11 April 2015
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.