Country Images Magazine Derby May 2018 | Page 18

The Lost Houses of Derbyshire by Maxwell Craven Sheffi eld. To Glossop Hall he added a rather overlarge three storey and three by three bay residential block of the SE angle, and rebuilt the chapel at the NE end in heroic style complete with a space-rocket campanile which looked for all the world as if it had slipped across the Irish sea from somewhere like Tara. His client essentially wanted a lot more than the size, cost or the site of the existing building could allow, and the result was the rambling inchoate house of later years. It was however, set in splendidly designed grounds, almost certainly the work of Edward Milner (1819-1884) mainly re-modelled before the rebuilding of the house. Milner was later to design the park at Buxton. To the east, a series of massive terraces led up to the entrance, whilst the private garden and lawns were to the south, where an impressive conservatory by Messengers of Loughborough was added. Francis, 2nd Lord Howard succeeded in 1883 and about two decades later called in the Arts- and-Craft s architect John Douglas of Chester to make alterations on the recommendation of the 1st Duke of Westminster, but the family made increasingly little use of the house, even during the shooting season, aft er the Great War and when Lord Francis died in 1924, his son and successor (another Bernard) found himself saddled with death duties and decided to sell the house and the 9,110 acre estate. Th is page; top to bottom: Th e surviving lodge, photographed in the 1960s, with the truncated rusticated gate piers beside it. [Private collection] Th e NE angle with chapel and space rocket campanile being demolished. [Private collection] Interior of the chapel as rebuilt in 1850, from the sale catalogue 1926. [Private collection] 18 | CountryImagesMagazine.co.uk Th e immediate Parkland, however, was purchased ‘with rare public spirit’ by the Glossop Borough Council and remains an attractive park (called Manor Park) to this day, having been added to the National Register of Parks and Gardens at Grade II in 2001. Th e house, not wholly surprisingly in that un- optimistic age, failed to sell and was instead let as a school becoming the Kingsmoor Residential School, moving in at the beginning of May, 1927, and aft er a period of uncertainty, fl ourished until the post-war period, when numbers fell and in 1953 the school left the hall and moved to new premises in Marple, Cheshire. Th ereaft er, no tenant could be found, and the site was eventually sold to a developer, being fi nally demolished in 1958-59. One of Hadfi eld’s lodges survives as a house at the top end of Norfolk Street where it meets Talbot Road, and the house site is covered with the 1950s bungalows of Kingsmoor, Park and Hall Closes.