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Hough End Hall

Hough End Hall
Hough End Hall
General information
TypeMansion
Architectural styleElizabethan
AddressNell Lane
Town or cityChorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester
CountryEngland
Coordinates53°26′10″N 2°15′53″W / 53.436111°N 2.264722°W / 53.436111; -2.264722
Completed1596
Designations
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameHough End Hall
Designated25 February 1952
Reference no.1283002
Website
houghendhall.org
Sir Nicholas Mosley pictured in 1599 as Lord Mayor of London

Hough End Hall is a historic house now in Chorlton-cum-Hardy (originally in Withington[1]), Manchester, England. It was built in 1596 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I by Sir Nicholas Mosley (c. 1527 – 1612), when he became Lord of the Manor of Manchester and of the dependent Manor of Withington (Chorlton-cum-Hardy was at the time a township within the Manor of Withington). The Mosleys were an influential Mancunian family from the 16th century onwards, and prominent in the affairs of the Manchester district for two and a half centuries.

Description

The house stands on Nell Lane, just north-east of Barlow Moor Road. Behind it runs the route of the Metrolink to East Didsbury and Manchester Airport, and Chorlton Brook runs past it on the north side (Mauldeth Road West passes it on the southern side). It is a brick, three-storey brick building with gabled wings, which are ornamented with balls. The central portion of the house is surmounted with a parapet in the form of three smaller gables with similar finials. The chimneys are square shafts set diagonally on square bases.

History and restoration

Over the years the house has been considerably altered, with new windows and structural alterations. The original oak nail-studded back door is now inside the house, and a five-light window on the return of the staircase bay is built up and can only be seen from inside. The house has previously been used as a toolhouse, a blacksmith's shop and a farmhouse. The interior had been stripped of its original oak fittings by the 20th century; a handsome staircase at the east end of the house was removed by Lord Egerton to Tatton Hall. Restoration in the later 20th century proved controversial.[2]

In 1917 some of the lands of the Hough End estate lying to the north-east of the hall, and north of the Midland Railway line, were taken over by the War Department for use as Alexandra Park Aerodrome until its closure in 1924; it is now used as a public recreational space.[3]

Present day

Today, Hough End Hall is surrounded by large concrete office blocks, partially hiding it from public view. It has Grade II* listed building status.[4] Part of the former grounds of the Alexandra Park Aerodrome are now used for the Greater Manchester Police police horse and dog training centre, the Hough End Centre, Broughton Park RUFC's ground, and Hough End Playing Fields, including the site of the new swimming pool for Chorlton-cum-Hardy and Withington.

There was a fundraising campaign by The Friends of Hough End Hall to turn the building into a community centre.[3] In late 2015, a local group purchased the building and said it would be called Hough End Hall Academy, adding that it will be used for educational purposes.[5] It is now an academy and mosque. [6]

See also

References

  1. ^ 1845 Tithe Map
  2. ^ "'Townships: Withington', A History of the County of Lancashire: Volume 4 (1911)". British History Online. Retrieved 30 December 2006.
  3. ^ a b "Districts & Suburbs of Manchester: Chorlton-cum-Hardy". manchester2002-uk.com/. Archived from the original on 9 December 2006. Retrieved 30 December 2006.
  4. ^ Historic England. "Hough End Hall, Manchester (1283002)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 28 May 2008.
  5. ^ Hough End Hall has a new owner - Friends of Hough End Hall
  6. ^ Hough End Hall Academy and Mosque
  • R. A. Scholefield "Manchester's Early Airfields", a chapter in Moving Manchester: aspects of the history of transport in the city and region since 1700; edited by Derek Brumhead and Terry Wyke. Lancashire & Cheshire Antiquarian Society, Manchester, 2004, (as the one hundredth volume of the Transactions of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society: ISSN 0950-4699)


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