Carsick Hall

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Carsick Hall
The red-brick front facade of the Deming Armory
Carsick Hall from Carsick Hill Road
General information
StatusResidential Property
TypeVictorian Lodge
Architectural styleVictorian
AddressCarsick Hill Road
Town or cityRanmoor, Sheffield
CountryEngland
Completed1842
Design and construction
Main contractorReginald Wood

Carsick Hall is a stone built Victorian Lodge located in the affluent Ranmoor[1] area of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, which lies 3 miles west of Sheffield City Centre.

Carsick Hall is notable in the area for being built on an old Roman road, near what is now known as Hallam Head. The property sits on a plot inhabited since the writing of the original Domesday Book.[2]

Carsick Hall was built in 1842 by Reginald Wood for William Creswick of the renowned Creswick's Silversmiths of Sheffield.[3] A building of this age is rare in Sheffield due to the effects of the German Blitz.[4]

'Carsick' is derived from 'Carr', meaning wet woodland and 'Sick' or 'Syke' meaning stream or valley. Carsick Brook passes through the grounds of the hall on its way to the Ponderosa.[5]

Residents and history[]

  • 1842 – Erection of Carsick Hall By Reginald Wood
  • 1843 – William Creswick of Creswick Silversmiths puts himself forwards as representative for the Sandygate ward.
  • 1879 – Carsick Hall at Carsick Hall Road sold to Mr. James Ward for £370
  • 1901 – Carsick Hall now 5,072 sq. yards [6]
  • 1907 – Death of Reginald Wood aged 85 of Carsick View Road Builder and Contractor of Carsick Hall
  • 1911 – John Pepper Optician married with Ellen Thompson registered as servant for the census
  • 1938 – Elizabeth Craven dies at Carsick Hall wife of Ernest
  • 1940 – Ernest Craven of Craven Rail Carriage Company dies leaving an estate of £31,741 (1,948,323 in 2017) [7]

1960 - Eric and Sheila Robinson purchased Carsick Hall

  • 1980 – Peter Horspool of Accroyd and Abbott Building Company purchases Carsick Hall
  • 2006 – Carsick Hall acquired by Stefan and Shaney Firth of The Yorkshire Tile Company.

References[]

  1. ^ [Victorian cities: How different?]
  2. ^ [The politics of urban leaseholds in late Victorian England]
  3. ^ [Sheffield, its story and its achievements]
  4. ^ [From Blitz to Blair: a new history of Britain since 1939]
  5. ^ [Rebuilding the House of life: Dante Gabriel Rossetti, ekphrasis and Victorian sexuality]
  6. ^ [The municipal housing programme in Sheffield before 1914]
  7. ^ [The municipal housing programme in Sheffield before 1914]

Coordinates: 53°22′26″N 1°32′14″W / 53.3739°N 1.5372°W / 53.3739; -1.5372

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