Alkington, Shropshire Explained

Country:England
Static Image Name:Alkington Hall - geograph.org.uk - 200378.jpg
Static Image Caption:Alkington Hall
Coordinates:52.948°N -2.699°W
Official Name:Alkington
Civil Parish:Whitchurch Rural
Unitary England:Shropshire
Lieutenancy England:Shropshire
Region:West Midlands
Constituency Westminster:North Shropshire
Post Town:WHITCHURCH
Postcode District:SY13
Postcode Area:SY
Dial Code:01948
Os Grid Reference:SJ530392

Alkington is a hamlet in Shropshire, England, near Whitchurch and south of that town.

The village is on limestone and is residential.

Alkington Hall

Alkington Hall was a late 16th-century country house, now a Grade II* listed farmhouse.

It was constructed in two storeys of red brick with grey brick diapering and grey sandstone ashlar dressings and a plain tile and slate roofs to an L-shaped floor plan.[1]

The manor was held by the Cotton family from the 16th century, of the line of the Cottons of Alkington was Lord Mayor of London in 1625; Sir Allan Cotton.[2]

It was built in 1592, probably for the London merchant, William Cotton. The Cotton family rose in prominence due to proximity to Sir Rowland Hill, (publisher of the Geneva Bible and hero of Shakespeare’s As You Like It) whose lands they managed in Shropshire.[3] Architectural association with Hill’s house at Soulton Hall is observable: the out put of a relationship between the families potentially operational into the seventeen century and seen in the evacuation of the Old Sir Rowland's library from Soulton around the time of the 1643 Battle of Wem, with he forwarding on of his papers into what us now called the Cotton Library.[4]

Rowland Cotton of this family was a favourite of Prince Henry Frederick and was an MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme for many years and High Sheriff of Shropshire for 1616.[5] [6] His monument in nearby Norton-in-Hales was designed by Inigo Jones.[7]

The Cotton family are important in holding what is known today as the Cotton Library, which saved multiple important documents (including Beowulf and Magna Carter) for the English nation.[8] [9]

Some alterations and improvements were made in the late 19th century. It was saved from a fire in 2010 when in the ownership of John and Elaine Fearnall.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alkington Hall, Whitchurch Rural. British Listed Buildings. 26 April 2013.
  2. Lang . R. G. . 1974 . Social Origins and Social Aspirations of Jacobean London Merchants . The Economic History Review . 27 . 1 . 28–47 . 10.2307/2594202 . 0013-0117.
  3. Web site: nortoninhales . 2017-06-02 . History of Norton Parish . 2023-11-20 . nortoninhales . en.
  4. Web site: Radio Shropshire - Listen Live - BBC Sounds . 2023-12-16 . www.bbc.co.uk . en-GB.
  5. Web site: COTTON, Rowland (1581-1634), of Crooked Lane, London; later of Alkington Hall, Whitchurch and Bellaport Hall, Norton-in-Hales, Salop. History of Parliament Online. 28 April 2013.
  6. Web site: 2019-02-12 . Sir Rowland Cotton (1581 – 1634) . 2023-11-20 . The History Detective . en.
  7. Web site: Norton in Hales Saint Chad’s . 2023-11-20 . www.achurchnearyou.com . en.
  8. Web site: Sir Gawain: Patron's Place History Today . 2023-11-20 . www.historytoday.com.
  9. Web site: COTTON, Rowland (1674-1753), of Etwall, Derbys. and Bellaport, Salop. History of Parliament Online . 2023-11-21 . www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  10. Web site: Historic Whitchurch hall saved from fire. Whitchurch Herald. 28 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20160131030550/http://www.whitchurchherald.co.uk/news/84044/historic-whitchurch-hall-saved-from-fire.aspx. 31 January 2016. dead.