Alston Hall Explained

Alston Hall
Map Type:United Kingdom Borough of Ribble Valley
Building Type:Country house
Architectural Style:Victorian gothic
Owner:Lancashire County Council
Location Town:Longridge, Lancashire
Location Country:England
Coordinates:53.8°N -2.596°W
Completion Date:c.1876
Architect:Alfred Darbyshire

Alston Hall is a 19th-century Victorian gothic style country mansion located in Longridge (near Preston) in Lancashire, England. It is not to be confused with the 15th-century Alston Old Hall nearby.

History

Alston Hall, designed by the architect Alfred Darbyshire, was built c.1876 for John Mercer, a Newton-le-Willows colliery owner. It passed down to his grand-daughter, who was a nun, and was then sold to the Eccles cotton manufacturing family who sold it in turn to William Birtwistle, another wealthy cotton industrialist. In 1949 the Birtwistles sold most of the land to the Church Commissioners and the hall itself, together with the remaining three acres of land, to Preston Borough Council as a Day Continuation College. In 1974 it was purchased by Lancashire County Council and converted to a residential training centre.[1]

Alston Hall is no longer owned and operated by Lancashire Adult Learning.[2] It is now owned by a private individual as a family home.

The hall is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alston Hall. 2013-10-08. https://archive.today/20131108211910/http://www.visitlancashire.com/things-to-do/alston-hall-p7643. 2013-11-08. dead.
  2. Web site: Finch. Fiona. 2016-05-24. County Council sells Alston Hall country mansion - Lancashire Evening Post. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160530070525/http://www.lep.co.uk/news/county-council-sells-alston-hall-country-mansion-1-7929311. 2016-05-30. lep.co.uk.