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Southill House, Cranmore

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Country
  
Town or city
  
Cran

Completed
  
Early 18th century

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Southill House in Cranmore, Somerset, England, is an early 18th-century manor house. It was given a new facade by John Wood, the Younger, of Bath, in the late 18th century. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building.

Map of Southill House, Shepton Mallet, UK

The house is on a site which may have been used for Roman buildings including a hypocaust.

The current 18th-century building includes some remaina from a 17th-century building,. standing in a landscaped park.

in World War II the house was used as a base for the Auxiliary Unit Scout Patrol.

The house received moderate publicity in 1998 when a "cow grazing near the croquet lawn" fell through the turf into a forgotten tunnel. The writings of a Victorian servant in the house, Edwin Charles Cox, revealed that the passages were said to be haunted but upon his exploration only contained remainder furniture.

In 2011 the house was short-listed in a competition run by Country Life magazine to find England's Favourite House and was chosen as the South West regional winner.

References

Southill House, Cranmore Wikipedia