Country Images Magazine Derby Edition September 2017 | Page 19
D e r b y s h i re -
Lost Houses
ago converted into cottages, and today a stylish
residence – than of the house that went with it.
Th anks, however to the survival of two sketches
of 1839, we can at last assess the Old Hall. Th e
anonymous pencil sketches are of high quality,
and show a house very reminiscent of Somersal
Herbert, further west in the County. It also
closely resembles the two surviving pictures of
Twyford Old Hall before its drastic reduction
to a pair of agricultural labourers’ cottages in
the third quarter of the 19 th century (and, again,
today, a stylish and sympathetically restored
home).
At Walton, we have a three gabled timber framed
front, with another range behind (probably
facing west if my reading of the surrounding
topography is right) embellished with herring-
bone studding with the entrance in the right
hand gable, just as at Somersal, although Walton’s
gabled bays were more or less symmetrical, unlike
the other house, where the gables get narrower
as they ascend in height. Th e diff erence is that,
whilst the FitzHerberts built Somersal Herbert
in stages from 1562, here at Walton we appear to
have a house built all of a piece.
Not that changes were not made. Th e other
picture shows the south and east fronts. Th e
former is clearly a 17 th century re-building
or expansion in brick with probably timber
mullion-and-transom cross windows, and would
appear to be identifi able with the last portion
of the house to survive. At the back, this 17 th
century gabled range quickly gives way to a
timber-framed part and a longer, lower timber
wing with a wavy roofl ine which might suggests
that it was thatched until not so long before the
artist came along. In 1664, the house was taxed
on a substantial 17 hearths, confi rming that it
was quite a grand house, larger than Catton then
was, and Croxall, another Elizabethan mansion
nearby.
Th e 17 th century alterations were made by John
Ferrers of Walton, the man who, in 1680, sold a
portion of the estate to a former tenant, Richard
Taylor, descendant of an old Surrey family,
the fi rst of whom had moved to Walton as the
Ferrers’ bailiff (we would say agent today). At
that time, the Taylors were living in a modest
house taxed, in contrast, on but two hearths, but
having bought a chunk of the Walton estate, that
changed, and they began to build on to it. Th e
house this family eventually created in 1723-
1724 is the present Walton Hall.
But whilst the Taylor’s estate expanded and
prospered, that of the Ferrers began to shrink.
Th e reason was, in essence, that the Old Hall
estate, once the Ferrers family had failed in the
male line, early in the 18 th century, it thereaft er
passed by marriage through the hands of a series
of grandees happily settled well away from the
Trent Valley. Th us it fell into the hands of tenants,
whose absentee landlords were not averse to
selling chunks of land in order to settle debts.
Th us Walton Old Hall passed via the daughter
and heiresss of Sir Humhprey Ferrers of Walton
and Tamworth to Hon. Robert Shirley (happily
seated at Staunton Harold), from him to the
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