Tushingham Hall is a Grade II listed building in the Cheshire West and Chester local planning authority area, England. First listed on 22 October 1952. Hall. 2 related planning applications.

Tushingham Hall

WRENN ID
stark-garret-lichen
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cheshire West and Chester
Country
England
Date first listed
22 October 1952
Type
Hall
Source
Historic England listing

Description

Tushingham Hall is an early 19th-century hall incorporating 17th-century features, some of which were brought into the building later. It is constructed of rendered brick with grey slate roofs. The hall has two storeys and three windows across the front. The Tudor Revival front is symmetrical, with a recessed central section containing a single window above a canted open porch featuring three Tudor arches and a parapet. The entrance is through glazed double doors within a panelled case; each canted face of the porch has a blank loophole. The mullioned two-light central window has two eight-pane sashes under a label, surmounted by a wreath below a false shaped gable, with a diamond-flue chimney at each corner. Each cross-wing has a three-light mullioned window to each storey, featuring eighteen-pane sashes on the lower floor and eight-pane sashes above, with mock-crenellated gables. A diminishing chimney with a single diagonal flue is located at each outer corner. The interior was not inspected, but includes a 17th-century open-well staircase with heavy turned balusters, which is said to be from Ravenscroft Hall. There are also moulded panelled plaster ceilings in the front rooms, massive overmantels, and six-panel doors.

Detailed Attributes

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