Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Broxton Old Hall

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OS grid reference
  
SJ 487,533

Designated
  
22 October 1952

Opened
  
1873

Architect
  
Built
  
1595

Reference no.
  
1229906

Restored
  
1873

Broxton Old Hall httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons00

Location
  
Broxton, Cheshire, England

Built for
  
Architectural style
  
Similar
  
Bickerton Hill, Eaton Hall - Cheshire, Cholmondeley Castle, Coronation Chair, Bolesworth Castle

Broxton Old Hall (or Broxton Higher Hall) is in Old Coach Road 0.5 miles (1 km) west of the village of Brown Knowl, in the civil parish of Broxton, Cheshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.

Contents

Broxton Old Hall Broxton Old Hall The oldest part dates from the late sixte Flickr

History

The site has been occupied since before 1327. The oldest surviving part of the present house dates from 1595, when it was built for Thomas Dod. In 1873 the house was extended, incorporating fabric from the older house, by the Chester architect John Douglas. This was commissioned by Sir Philip de Grey Egerton of Oulton Park as a dower house. It was purchased by Malcolm Walker, owner of the Iceland Food Store Chain, in 1985 for £750,000, and re-modelled and extended for him by The Carnell Green Partnership in 1987–88.

Architecture

Broxton Old Hall Gate Entrance at Broxton Old Hall Jeff Buck ccbysa20

The house is timber-framed with oak frames and plaster panels. The roofs are of stone slates and have ornate bargeboards and finials. The chimneys consist of detached diagonal flues. The house is in two storeys. The original part of the house has four bays and two gables and a gabled porch. To the left of this part of the house is a recessed wing with one gable and to its right is a projecting wing with one gable. To the sides of each of these are further recessed wings, that to the left having a further gable. The windows are of oak; those in the upper storey have mullions and those in the lower storey have mullions and transoms. The architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner described it as being "an ornate gabled black and white house".

Broxton Old Hall Broxton Old Hall Lodge and Entrance M J Richardson Geograph

The lodge to the hall is also listed Grade II. It is dated 1873, is a timber-framed building on a brick plinth and was designed by John Douglas. It has one storey and is in Jacobethan style.

Gardens

Broxton Old Hall Detailed Record

The grounds of the hall contain a formal garden, garden terraces, lawns, a lake, follies and a yew avenue. The grounds are not open to the public. In the garden is a structure cut into a cliff and partly lined with blocks of sandstone. It dates from the early 19th century or before. Its base measures around 6m square and it is 4m high. On the floor are stone flags and the ceiling slopes to a central ridge. To its right is a shallow partly natural cave. The structure is a Grade II listed building. It has been described variously as a "stone parlour", a grotto, or King James' Parlour.

References

Broxton Old Hall Wikipedia