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Wikidata has entry The Old Hall And Attached Outbuilding And Boundary Wall (Q26536437) with data related to this item. Licensing This image was taken from the Geograph project collection.
Historic England, "The Old Hall and attached outbuildings and boundary wall, House and attached walls, East Bridgford (1243772)", National Heritage List for England Historic England, "Walnut Lodge and adjoining stables, East Bridgford (1243773)" , National Heritage List for England , retrieved 19 April 2023
In 1785, the family moved to a new Healaugh Hall, which was later demolished. [1] Rear wings were added to the Old Hall in about 1860, with the space between them infilled in the 20th century. The house was grade II listed, along with the wall to its left, in 1985. [2] The garden may be visited by arrangement, as part of the Quiet Gardens ...
The hotel has three storeys, three bays on the east front, three on the south front, and a two-storey, three-bay rear wing. On the east front is a porch with Tuscan columns, and two gables with pierced bargeboards. The former town hall project slightly, it has two storeys, three bays, and a hipped roof.
Car Colston has a private pre-school at Old Hall Farm. There are primary schools at East Bridgford (2 miles, 3.2 km) and Bingham. Toot Hill School in Bingham is a secondary school with a sixth form and academy status. [6] The parish church is dedicated to St Mary the Virgin. [7] It forms a joint Anglican parish with St Wilfrid's Church, Screveton.
An iron toll bridge over the River Trent between Gunthorpe and East Bridgford opened in 1875. [14] The toll house is now the Bridge & Bayleaf restaurant. In 1881 the population of Gunthorpe was 323, including 40 attending the church school.
By 1727, the Old Hall had become a hotel, the only one in Buxton, where the writer Daniel Defoe stayed on his tour of Great Britain. Of the Hall he wrote: "The Duke of Devonshire ... has built a large handsome house at the bath, where there is convenient lodging, and very good provisions, and an ordinary well served for one shilling per head; but it is but one."
Rufford Old Hall is a National Trust property in Rufford, Lancashire, England. Built in about 1530 for Sir Robert Hesketh, only the Great Hall survives from the original structure. [ 1 ] A brick-built wing in the Jacobean style was added in 1661, at right angles to the Great Hall, and a third wing was added in the 1820s.