New Hall Manor (Birmingham)
| hotel, country house, Grade I Listed (UK)
United Kingdom /
England /
Sutton Coldfield /
Birmingham /
New Hall Drive
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ Sutton Coldfield
World / United Kingdom / England
hotel, country house, Grade I Listed (UK)
New Hall Manor is a medieval manor house, now used as a hotel, located in Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands, England.
It is claimed to be one of the oldest inhabited moated houses in Britain, dating from the 13th century when the Earl of Warwick built a hunting lodge on the site. The first reference to the site as a manor is from 1435 when by the homage in a court baron at Sutton after Sir Richard Stanhope's death, when he held it of the Earl of Warwick. The core of the present building including the Great Hall dates from the 16th century when the Gibbons family (relatives of Bishop Vesey) were in residence. Thomas Gibbons is said to have bought New Hall in 1552. Later owners included the Sacheverells, who received it from Thomas and Edward Giddons, and the Chadwicks, who were bequeathed it from George Sacheverell. In 1739, the Sacheverells mortgaged the New Hall estate to Francis Horton of Wolverhampton.
The buildings served briefly as a school from 1885 until Lt. Col. Wilkinson restored the Hall to residential use in 1903. In 1923 it was acquired by Alfred Owen of Rubery Owen and remained the Owen family home until the 1970s. It was converted to a hotel in 1988 by Ian Hannah and Ken Arkley, of Thistle Hotels. It is now owned and operated by Hand Picked Hotels.
The house gives its name to Sutton New Hall ward, New Hall Valley and the New Hall Valley Country Park therein, and also the New Hall Estate and New Hall Manor Estate, which was constructed on New Hall Farm, both residential developments.
The building is Grade I listed, with other Grade II structures.
It is claimed to be one of the oldest inhabited moated houses in Britain, dating from the 13th century when the Earl of Warwick built a hunting lodge on the site. The first reference to the site as a manor is from 1435 when by the homage in a court baron at Sutton after Sir Richard Stanhope's death, when he held it of the Earl of Warwick. The core of the present building including the Great Hall dates from the 16th century when the Gibbons family (relatives of Bishop Vesey) were in residence. Thomas Gibbons is said to have bought New Hall in 1552. Later owners included the Sacheverells, who received it from Thomas and Edward Giddons, and the Chadwicks, who were bequeathed it from George Sacheverell. In 1739, the Sacheverells mortgaged the New Hall estate to Francis Horton of Wolverhampton.
The buildings served briefly as a school from 1885 until Lt. Col. Wilkinson restored the Hall to residential use in 1903. In 1923 it was acquired by Alfred Owen of Rubery Owen and remained the Owen family home until the 1970s. It was converted to a hotel in 1988 by Ian Hannah and Ken Arkley, of Thistle Hotels. It is now owned and operated by Hand Picked Hotels.
The house gives its name to Sutton New Hall ward, New Hall Valley and the New Hall Valley Country Park therein, and also the New Hall Estate and New Hall Manor Estate, which was constructed on New Hall Farm, both residential developments.
The building is Grade I listed, with other Grade II structures.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Hall_Manor
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 52°33'6"N 1°48'21"W
- New Hall Manor grounds 0.2 km
- Lea Marston - Golf Club, Hotel and Leisure Centre 6.1 km
- Road King (New Hollies) Truck Stop 24 km
- Champney Springs 28 km
- Longford Hall 47 km
- Breadsall Priory, A Marriott Hotel & Country Club 53 km
- Goldstone Wharf, Shropshire Union Canal 55 km
- Wychwood Park 69 km
- Darwin Forest Country Park 73 km
- Nunsmere Hall Hotel 92 km
- New Hall Valley Country Park 0.2 km
- Bishop Walsh Catholic School grounds 0.5 km
- New Hall Manor estate 0.5 km
- Newhall Estate 0.5 km
- Rectory Park 1.4 km
- Sutton Coldfield Town Centre 1.6 km
- Sutton Trinity 1.7 km
- Erdington 2.7 km
- Sutton Vesey 3.2 km
- Sutton Four Oaks 3.9 km