Shawdon Hall
Shawdon Hall is a privately owned 18th-century country house located between Bolton and Hedgeley, near Alnwick, Northumberland, in North East England. It is a Grade II* listed building.[1]
History
The manor of Shawdon was owned by Thomas Lilburn, a member of the House of Lilburn, in the 15th century. A survey of 1541 disclosed a 'tower in measurable good reparation' in the ownership of Cuthbert Proctor.[2]
John Proctor sold the estate in 1705.[3]
The new owner William Hargrave (who was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1783) demolished the old house and replaced it in 1779 with a new mansion, probably designed by architect William Newton. The house is of two stories with a seven-bay entrance front, the central three bays being pilastered and with a pediment bearing the 1817 arms of Pawson.[4]
Following the death of Hargrave in 1817 the 1,050-acre (4.2 km2) estate passed by the marriage of the Hargrave heiress to John Pawson.[5] Later Pawsons to serve as High Sheriff were William in 1826 and William John in 1861.
Important historical artifacts have been found on the Shawdon Hall estate. In 1761 two Roman urns containing human remains were unearthed and in 1828 gold coins including a rare Rose noble from the time of Edward I were found.[6]
References
- ↑ Images of England:Shawdon Hall
- ↑ Gatehouse Gazetteer
- ↑ Journal of the House of Lords, Vol 17 1705 pp664-5 from British History Online
- ↑ Keys to the Past
- ↑ A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848 William Whellan pp56-8 from British History Online
- ↑ A History Topography and Directory of Northumberland 1855 William Whellan p667 from Google Books
Coordinates: 55°25′22″N 1°51′19″W / 55.42270°N 1.85526°W