Country Images Magazine North May 2018 | Page 15

The Lost Houses of Derbyshire by Maxwell Craven Glossop Hall Th e south East part of the house showing the improved conservatory and John Douglas’s raised roof and low canted bay to the left , from a post-card. [M. Craven] T he Glossop Hall that was demolished in 1958-59 was an unlovely house of titanic proportions, once set in a spectacular wooded park. Unlovely it may have been, but it had an interesting history and was itself at least the third house on the site, although it probably included portions of the fabric of at least one of its predecessors. Th e manorial estate of Glossop passed at the Dissolution from the Abbey of Basingwerk to the Talbots, Earls of Shrewsbury & Waterford, of whom George, the 6th Earl had the dubious fortune to have married Bess of Hardwick, who spent much of his fortune building prodigy houses like Worksop Manor and Hardwick. At this stage we have no knowledge if there was a manor house at Glossop, especially as all the families mentioned so far were fi rmly seated elsewhere. View of the 1820 hall and stables (left ) on an ivory paperknife, c. 1850, which bears the crest of the architect of the new house, M E Hadfi eld, on the reverse. [Private collection] CountryImagesMagazine.co.uk | 15