Chillington Hall

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Chillington Hall is a Georgian country house in Codsall Wood, four miles northwest of Wolverhampton, England. The house was designed by Francis Smith in 1724 and John Soane in 1785. The park and lake were landscaped by Capability Brown.

In the Domesday Book, Chillington (Cillintone) is entered under Warwickshire as forming part of the estates of William Fitz Corbucion, and it was the latter's grandson, Peter Corbesun of Studley, who granted Chillington to Peter Giffard, his wife's nephew, for a sum of 25 marks and a charger of metal.

The present house is the third on the site. In the 12th Century there was a stone castle upon the site, a small corner of which can be seen in the cellars of the present house, and beside it the original house. This house was replaced by Sir John Giffard in the 1500s. Peter Giffard began the third building by demolishing and replacing part of Sir John's Tudor house in 1724. This rebuilding replaced the existing south front of three storeys in red facing brinks with stone dressing.

In about 1725, Peter Giffard planted the long avenue of oak trees which formed the original approach to the house, but he probably incorporated many existing trees. During the 1770s, Lancelot Brown ("Capability" Brown) designed the landscape park and lake to the south of the house for Thomas Giffard the elder.