Crimplesham Hall

Crimplesham Hall
Location within Norfolk
General information
Location Crimplesham Hall, Norfolk
Coordinates 52°36′29″N 0°25′53″E / 52.607937°N 0.431483°E / 52.607937; 0.431483
Construction started 1880
Completed 1881
Client John Grant Morris
Design and construction
Architect Alfred Waterhouse
Main contractor Messrs Gage & Sons

Crimplesham Hall is a Grade II Listed manor house in Crimplesham, Norfolk, England. Although records indicate a house existed at the site as far back as 1040, the current house was completed in 1881 and designed by Alfred Waterhouse.

History

There are records of a manor here since 1040.[1]

In June 1781 the previous house was advertised for rent in the Norfolk Chronicle[2] and described thus:-

To be Lett, and entered upon at Old Michaelmas next, all that modern built Capital Messuage situate in Crimplesham, in the County of Norfolk; consisting of a Hall, two Parlours, four very good Lodging Rooms, and compleat Garrets, Kitchen, Dairy, Pantry, Cellars, and other convenient Offices, Coach-house and Stabling for eight Horses, with a Granary over the same, Dove-cote well stocked with pigeons, Yards and Garden, well planted with Fruit Trees, with an Orchard and Paddock adjoining, containing together, by Estimation, five Acres, and with or without eighteen Acres of excellent Pasture Ground, now in the Occupation of Mr James Drew. The said Premisses exceedingly well adapted for the Residence of a Gentleman fond of Country Diversions, and are pleasantly situate within half a Mile of the Turnpike Road from Lynn to London, three of Downham-market, nine of Swaffham, and ten of Lynn, all considerable Market Towns”.

In 1881 John Grant Morris [3] paid for a new hall to be built and gave it to his daughter as a wedding present. She married a local landowner Sir Alfred Bagge RN, second son of Sir W Bagge MP for West Norfolk, between 1837–1859 and 1865 - 1881. The new hall, a 10-bedroom mansion of white brick structure set in a wooded park, was designed in 1880 by Alfred Waterhouse (1830–1905) and it was erected in 1881. The first payment was on 30 July 1880, and the last payment on 17 November 1881. The payments totalled £6,994 and 15 Shillings. £5,994 and 15 Shillings being the construction costs and £1000 for the finishings.[4] The finishings were from Maples in London [5] and were of very high quality, particularly the fine doors and other woodwork of matched Canadian Pine.
The house design was very modern for the time, with warm air ducted central heating to all the rooms, its own electricity generator in the stable block, and its own sewerage system and water supply.

In the garden are an artificial lake and a fine Victorian folly[6] in the form of a Gothic Chapel, the materials of which are thought to have come from the ruins of West Dereham Abbey or a building reclaim yard. It may predate the new house.

Waterhouse had previously built for Morris Allerton Priory, near Liverpool; he later built also a villa near Cannes.

The Early Victorian Folly

Notable residents

In 1845, the former building was occupied by Mrs Elizabeth Doyle,[7] an eminent Quaker and close friend of Elizabeth Fry. Bible Society meetings were held in the house from time to time.[8]

References

  1. Domesday Book & An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk –Vol 7 by Francis Blomefield.
  2. 23 June 1781 Norfolk Chronicle p.2 col.4
  3. White's Directory 1883
  4. Original documents in possession of the current owners
  5. Markings on woodwork and fittings
  6. Follies, a National Trust Guide 1986
  7. White’s Directory 1854
  8. Friends Review, Philadelphia June 1861, Vol XIV

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