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The coat of arms of William Vardon of Goldstone Hall (1783–1856), lord of the manor of Goldstone, from his memorial inside St. Swithun's Church, Cheswardine. The heraldry of the shield is Or, Fretty Gules, illustrating the connection with the de Verdun/Verdon family of Alton, Staffordshire; the crest of a stag's head should have antlers, but these broke off many years ago
Goldstone Hall 63 (207) 18 2023 Residential The tallest of five towers which are part of Brighton University's 'Big Build' project. [5] =5 Theobald House 63 (207) 18 1966 Residential Built on top of a car park (not included in floor count).
Cheswardine (/ tʃ ɛ z w ʊər d aɪ n / CHEZ-war-dyne) is a rural village and civil parish in north east Shropshire, England.The village lies close to the border with Staffordshire and is about 8 miles north of Newport and 5 miles south east of Market Drayton.
The hall is stuccoed and has a slate roof. There are two storeys and seven bays. In the centre is a semicircular portico with six unfluted Greek Doric columns. In the garden front at the rear are two two-storey bow windows. The hall is connected to the smaller houses by blind six-bay arcades with a moulded entablature. The Garden House has been ...
Domestic Chapel Approximately 350 Metres South of Halston Hall Whittington: Chapel: Early 16th century: 8 October 1959: 1367397: Upload Photo: Halston Hall including attached Flanking Walls and Balustrade to Rear
Ellerton is a small hamlet in Shropshire, England. It lies in a rather isolated rural area several miles north of the town of Newport, close to the village of Sambrook, and is part of the civil parish of Cheswardine. Its name may be derived from the Old English alor , and tun (farm or enclosure); "the farm at the alder tree". [1]
Woore is a civil parish in Shropshire, England.It contains ten listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England.All the listed buildings are designated at Grade II, the lowest of the three grades, which is applied to "buildings of national importance and special interest". [1]
Orleton Hall is a country house and estate at Wrockwardine in Shropshire, England. A Grade II* listed building, the current house was designed c.1830 by Edward Haycock Sr. for Edward Cludde. The site is much older and was the ancestral home of the Cluddes, who took their name from the nearby village of Cluddley, from the 14th century.