Side view of Rushton Hall
Sprowston Manor, Norwich
Sprowston Manor
The door to knowledge.
The Glory Hole, Lincoln
The Hospitium, York
The Hospitium, York.
The Hospitium, York.
The Royal Mile (Princes St.) Edinburgh
The Sovereign's Entrance (2)
The Sovereign's Entrance
York Art Gallery
York Crown Court
Windows
Family Matters
St Pancras Station Clock
Let us out of here!!
A bowl of black eyes...
Edinburgh's Acropolis
The Cabbage Flower
Bluebells
Just a winter's day doodle.
The Meeting Place
Rushton Hall
Rushton Hall, Northamptonshire.
Rushton Hall dining room
Rushton Hall 2
Rushton Hall
Rushton Hall (lounge 1)
Rushton Hall (Fireplace) 1
Rushton Hall (fireplace 3)
Rushton Hall (fireplace 2)
Rushton Hall (Dining room )
Rushton Hall (Dining room )
Peterborough City Centre.
Pencil sketch of Boughton House
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
Paris 2009
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 29 Jan 2014
-
428 visits
Side view of Rushton Hall


Rushton Hall is a magnificent building, built mainly in local stone. It was commenced by Sir John Tresham and his family around 1438 who owned the hall for nearly 200 years, and was later bought and enlarged by the Cockayne family around 1630.
The hall's interior is of a grand style. Huge stone and timber fireplaces in virtually every room, whilst ornate plasterwork and wonderful stained glass can be found in the Great Hall, Drawing Room, Dining Room Library, and various other rooms.
Sir Thomas Tresham created the Oratory which houses the precious plaster representation of Passion, dated 1577. It was removed from St Peters Church, which once stood in the grounds of the hall. He also built the Triangular Lodge, which is in the grounds of the Hall.
The RNIB (Royal National Institute for the Blind) opened the hall as a school in 1957 and sold it in 2003 to H I Limited, a privately owned family business, committed to maintaining the Hall for future generations.
It has now been transformed to a luxury hotel.
The hall's interior is of a grand style. Huge stone and timber fireplaces in virtually every room, whilst ornate plasterwork and wonderful stained glass can be found in the Great Hall, Drawing Room, Dining Room Library, and various other rooms.
Sir Thomas Tresham created the Oratory which houses the precious plaster representation of Passion, dated 1577. It was removed from St Peters Church, which once stood in the grounds of the hall. He also built the Triangular Lodge, which is in the grounds of the Hall.
The RNIB (Royal National Institute for the Blind) opened the hall as a school in 1957 and sold it in 2003 to H I Limited, a privately owned family business, committed to maintaining the Hall for future generations.
It has now been transformed to a luxury hotel.
, Danielle have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
****************************Merci de vos visites, très apprécié******************************
Your outstanding architectural image was admired & appreciated in ~ Architectural Marvels ~
Sign-in to write a comment.