Roddam Hall
Coordinates: 55°28′41″N 1°57′40″W / 55.478°N 1.961°W
Roddam Hall | |
---|---|
Roddam Hall Roddam Hall shown within Northumberland | |
OS grid reference | NU025204 |
|
Roddam Hall is a privately owned 18th-century country house near Wooler, Northumberland. It is a Grade II listed building.[1]
The Roddams, an ancient Northumbrian family, held lands at Roddam in ancient times.[2] A survey of 1541 reported a decaying tower house without a barmkin owned by John Roddam.[3] The Roddams lived at Houghton until the early 18th century when Edward Roddam sold the Haughton estate[2] and built a new three-storey five-bayed house at Roddam.[1]
From 1776 the house was owned by Admiral Robert Roddam. He was a brother-in-law of General Sir Henry Clinton (1730–1795). On his death the estate passed to a distant cousin William Spencer Stanhope who changed his name to Roddam. He was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1834.
The house was reduced to only two storeys[4] in the 20th century.
References
- 1 2 Keys to the Past
- 1 2 Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland (Vol 1 (1835) p 675 Google Books
- ↑ Gatehouse Gazetteer
- ↑ English Heritage: Images of England photograph 2004