Misplaced Pages

Rendlesham Hall

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The original house as it looked in 1818

Rendlesham Hall was a large manor house in the village of Rendlesham in Suffolk.

History

The hall was built in the pointed style in 1780 and two lodges, Woodbridge Lodge and Ivy Lodge, were added in 1790. The hall was acquired by Peter Thellusson, a wealthy banker, in the name of his son, in 1796. The son, the 1st Lord Rendlesham, who went into politics as a Member of Parliament, occupied the hall.

The hall was destroyed by fire in 1830 and was rebuilt in Jacobean style to a design by William Burn. The works, which were carried out by Lucas Brothers were completed in 1870. The new building had eight reception rooms, including a ballroom, a conservatory, twenty-five principal bedrooms with dressing rooms, nine secondary and thirteen servants' bedrooms, five bathrooms, eleven lavatories and extensive domestic offices. There were 25 acres (10 ha) of grounds with tennis and croquet lawns, and a 4-acre (16,000 m) walled kitchen garden in a park which extended to 250 acres (1.0 km).

The 5th Lord Rendlesham died in 1911, and the hall was put up for sale in 1920, but there were no bidders. In 1923 the hall was sold for use as a sanatorium, in which use it remained until the Second World War, when it was occupied by the British Army. For over 80 years the hall had played a major role in the social life of Suffolk, but after World War II it stood empty, and it was finally demolished in 1949.

Images

  • The east end of the house The east end of the house
  • The north end, showing the main entrance The north end, showing the main entrance
  • The north end The north end
  • The south end The south end
  • The west end, showing the greenhouse The west end, showing the greenhouse
  • Rendlesham Hall c. 1800 Rendlesham Hall c. 1800

References

  1. A Vision of Britain through time University of Portsmouth
  2. The Ivy Lodge at Rendlesham Hall
  3. ^ Our vanishing country houses
  4. Charles Thomas Lucas at Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

External links

52°08′02″N 1°24′49″E / 52.1340°N 1.4137°E / 52.1340; 1.4137

Categories:
Rendlesham Hall Add topic