OS grid reference SJ680 699 Reference no. 1138463 | Restored 1807, 1938, 2011 Year built 1780 Designated as world heritage site 10 March 1953 | |
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Whatcroft Hall is a country house situated 1.5 miles (2.4 km) to the southeast of the village of Davenham, Cheshire, England. It stands to the east of, and overlooking, the Trent and Mersey Canal. The house is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building.
Contents
History
Whatcroft Hall was built in 1780, and enlarged in 1807 for James Topping. The enlargement included a new front, and a dome at the centre of the house over a spiral staircase. There was a later extension adding bay windows, a loggia and a service wing, These were removed in 1938 when the house was reduced in size for Mrs F. F. Stirling. As of 2011, the house is being remodelled again.
Architecture
The house is constructed in brick with a slate roof. Its architectural style is Georgian. The house is in two storeys. The entrance front, which faces northwest, has six bays. At its corners are full-height pilasters surmounted by stone ogee finials. This front contains a pair of doors in a doorcase with pilasters, above which is frieze decorated with festoons and foliage, and a dentil pediment. The windows are sashes. The garden front at the southwest of the house has five bays. It contains four French windows and more sash windows. At the rear of the house is another pilastered doorcase with a pediment. The northeast elevation contains a further door, this one surmounted by a fanlight. On the roof of the house is a copper-covered, ogee-shaped cupola, with a weathervane. It stands on a drum containing four two-light Gothic-style windows. Internally, beneath the cupola, is a stone spiral staircase, with a metal balustrade and a wooden handrail.