Wiverton Hall

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Wiverton Hall
Wiverton Hall - geograph.org.uk - 1082050.jpg
Wiverton Hall is located in Nottinghamshire
Wiverton Hall
General information
TypeEnglish country house
LocationTithby
Town or cityBingham
CountryEngland
Coordinates52°55′12″N 0°56′26″W / 52.920112°N 0.940691°W / 52.920112; -0.940691Coordinates: 52°55′12″N 0°56′26″W / 52.920112°N 0.940691°W / 52.920112; -0.940691
Construction started1450
Renovated1814
ClientSir Thomas Chaworth
DesignationsGrade II* listed building

Wiverton Hall (sometimes pronounced /ˈwərtən/) is an English country house near Tithby, Nottinghamshire.[1] By 1510 the former village of Wyverton had become impoverished and reduced to just four houses and a cottage. It was in that year completely depopulated by "emparkment", when George Chaworth enlarged his park by 254 acres (103 ha).[2] All but the Grade II* listed gatehouse of the mansion was destroyed in the English Civil War. The current house dates from 1814.

History[]

Wiverton Hall is considered to have been established by Sir Thomas Chaworth (died 1458/59)[3] in 1450. In 1627 his descendant, Sir George Chaworth (died 1639) was created Viscount Chaworth of Armagh, and his son John Chaworth (died 1644) the second Viscount, was living at Wiverton.

English Civil War[]

Lord Chaworth supported Charles I of England and in December 1642 fortified Wiverton Hall to make it a garrison for the King. In June 1643, Queen Henrietta, on her way from Newark, wrote to the King: "I shall sleep at Werton [Wiverton], and thence to Ashby, where we will resolve what way to take." Among other royal guests were Prince Rupert of the Rhine and his brother Prince Maurice, who after visiting the King in Newark rode to Wiverton with about 400 troops and stayed there until they could settle their plans. It was from Wiverton that Prince Rupert addressed a letter to the Parliament, successfully asking for a pass for himself, his brother, and other noblemen and gentlemen to leave England.

On 4 November 1645, the garrison commanded by Lord Chaworth surrendered to troops under Major-General Sydnam Poyntz. Poyntz had taken Shelford Priory by storm on the previous day. He went to Wiverton and destroyed it to prevent its use as a garrison.

Current building[]

Wiverton Hall

The surviving gatehouse was then used as a farmhouse until the early 19th century. The current house was erected in 1814 in the Tudor Gothic Revival style.[4] In its restored form the mansion remained the property of the Chaworths until the family became extinct in the direct male line. Mary Chaworth conveyed the property to the family of Musters by her marriage in August 1805 to John Musters of Colwick Hall.[citation needed]

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Hall was the home of John Patricius Chaworth-Musters who also owned Annesley Hall, Nottinghamshire. He and his wife had six sons, five of whom fought in the First World War. Of these Patricius George died of wounds in 1915, Philip Mundy was killed in action in 1917 and Robert, weakened by poison gas, died of influenza in 1918.[citation needed]

Between 1923 and 1938 the house was let to tenants, one of whom was Mrs D'Oyley Ransome. In 1938 it was sold by John Neville Chaworth-Musters to the Crown along with its estate of 2,170 acres (878 ha), and was for a period the home of Major-General Sir Miles Graham and Lady Graham. During the Grahams' time, a visit was made there by Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein on 21 August 1948.[citation needed]

Anglican parishes[]

The hall gives its name to the Wiverton Hall ward of Rushcliffe Borough Council, as well as the group of Anglican parishes that surround it:

The population of Wiverton parish is included in the civil parish of Colston Bassett.

References[]

  1. ^ Nottinghamshire. History, directory and gazetteer of the county... White Francis. 1864
  2. ^ M.W. Beresford, The Lost Villages of England (1954), p. 210
  3. ^ The liturgy in medieval England: a history. Richard William Pfaff. 2009
  4. ^ Nikolaus Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire. London. 1979
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