Orleton Hall Explained

Orleton Hall
Coordinates:52.698°N -2.5422°W
Location:Wrockwardine, Shropshire, England
Built:c.1830
Built For:Edward Cludde
Original Use:Country house
Architect:Edward Haycock Sr.
Architecture:Neoclassical
Governing Body:Privately owned
Designation1:Grade II*
Designation1 Offname:Orleton Hall
Designation1 Date:17 June 1959
Designation1 Number:1033348
Designation2:Grade II*
Designation2 Offname:Orleton Hall gazebo
Designation2 Date:18 June 1959
Designation2 Number:1033349
Designation3:Grade II
Designation3 Offname:Orleton Hall Gatehouse and Bridge
Designation3 Date:21 June 1996
Designation3 Number:1217897
Designation4:Grade II
Designation4 Offname:Orleton Hall Dovecote
Designation4 Date:8 April 1983
Designation4 Number:1217910
Designation5:Historic garden
Designation5 Offname:Orleton Hall gardens
Designation5 Date:1 December 1986

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.

History

The Orleton estate was owned by the Cludde family from the 1300s. Their name derived from the village of Cluddley which stands close to the house.[1] Remnants of the medieval manor house survive, including part of the original moat. In the 1830s, Edward Cludde engaged Edward Haycock Sr. of Shrewsbury to rebuild the ancient house in a Neoclassical style. In 1854, the Cludde heiress, Anna Maria, married Robert Charles Herbert, a younger son of Edward Herbert, 2nd Earl of Powis and their grandson ultimately succeeded as the 5th earl. The house remains a private home in possession of the family and is not open to the public.[1]

Architecture and description

The house is of three-storeys, and built of stuccoed stone. The severity of the neoclassical design has been criticised; "the windows devoid of any ornament, the [main] façade without plat bands or quoins, the doorway little more than an opening". The architectural historian John Newman, in the Shropshire volume of Pevsner's Buildings of England, described the house as "plain", although he acknowledged the, probably earlier, "pretty details [such] as the oval window, the dormer and the lantern".

Orleton Hall is a Grade II* listed building and its grounds are listed at Grade II on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England. They contain a "remarkable" gazebo, dating from the 18th century and in a Chinoiserie taste, which has its own Grade II* listing.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Orleton Hall. Di Camillo. 7 June 2024.