Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Woolsington Hall

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Governing body
  
Privately owned

Designated as world heritage site
  
27 August 1952

Reference no.
  
1123737

Woolsington Hall i1thejournalcoukincomingarticle7062423eceAL

Location
  
Woolsington, Newcastle upon Tyne

Built
  
Third quarter 17th century with late 18th century and early 19th century wings

Similar
  
Wynyard Park - County D, Heritage at Risk, Kingston Park, Ouseburn, St James' Park

The grounds at woolsington hall


Woolsington Hall is a Grade II* listed country house in a 92-acre (37 ha) estate, in the village of Woolsington, in the City of Newcastle, England, north-west of Newcastle city centre. In addition to the hall, the stables, coach house, orangery, walled garden and east wing are Grade II listed.

Contents

Woolsington Hall Woolsington Hall fire being treated as arson say Northumbria Police

The hall is not habitable and requires full restoration. It has been on English Heritage's Heritage at Risk register since 2002.

Design

Woolsington Hall Woolsington Hall timeline History of the Newcastle building which

The hall is built of stone, with painted ashlar dressings and edged by quoins. The roof is made of slate from the Lake district with stone gables. The house is 2 storeys high, divided into 3 bays and a single bay wing.

History

Woolsington Hall Woolsington Hall IDPartnership

Woolsington Hall was the seat of the Bell family, landowners in Dinnington. In 1828 Matthew Bell, MP for Northumberland and Deputy Lieutenant of Northumberland was listed as living at the hall. All four battalions of the 103rd (Tyneside Irish) Brigade camped briefly at Woolsington Hall in May 1915. Conditions were so bad at Woolsington Hall that many soldiers who lived locally went home rather than stay there. The brigade trained in trench fighting at nearby Ponteland, and paraded through Newcastle city centre before departing from Woolsington for Salisbury Plain.

Woolsington Hall Woolsington Hall fire Search for arsonists who caused millions of

Woolsington Hall was bought by businessman Sir John Hall's Cameron Hall Developments for £1.32 million in 1994. Since 1994 Hall has proposed several developments of the Woolsington site including a football academy for Newcastle United, which was later built in Little Benton. A luxury hotel and golf course was later planned for the Woolsington Hall estate. Hall was threatened with legal action by Newcastle City Council in 2005 unless he carried out repairs to Woolsington Hall.

The hall was put up for sale for £2 million in October 2012, but withdrawn from sale in May 2013. Due to the dereliction of the hall, it has been described by the Daily Telegraph as a "distressed asset". In 2013 the councillor for the Woolsington ward, George Pattison, said that "It is a complete waste for it to be standing empty. It is a beautiful building and has a lot of historical significance...If it could be restored to something of the calibre of the Mansion House in Jesmond then it would be a great asset to the ward." The house was made weather tight in 2008.

Since 2002 the Woolington Hall estate has been on English Heritage's Heritage at Risk register. The register said that the hall "...is vacant and showing signs of roof failure." It is rated Category C by the register, defined as "Slow decay, no solution agreed".

The Leaze Gates, a set of two-tonne monumental gates from Newcastle United F.C.'s St. James Park stadium, were stored in the grounds of Woolsington Hall until their restoration in August 2013. It had been hoped that they would form the entrance to a new football training centre at the hall.

On the night of Tuesday 30 December 2015, Woolsington Hall was gutted by a fire which destroyed its floors and roof. It was described as an arson attack by Northumbria Police who appealed for information to identify the perpetrators.

In the summer of 2016, Woolsington Hall was standing roofless, with its walls supported by scaffolding.

References

Woolsington Hall Wikipedia