Ravenscroft Hall

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Ravenscroft Hall seen from Middlewich (2014)

Ravenscroft Hall is a country house standing to the east of the B5309 road (King Street) about 1 mile (1.6 km) to the north of Middlewich, Cheshire, England. The house was built in 1837 for William T. Buchanan, replacing a former Jacobean house.[1] It was extended, possibly in 1852 when the house was bought by the Moss family,[1] and again in 1877.[2] The house has since been divided into two dwellings.[3] It is constructed in roughcast and yellow brick, with stone dressings and slate roofs. The house is in two storeys, with a main front of five bays, and a five-bay extension to the northeast. The garden front also has five bays.[3] The house has an Ionic porch,[2] and an Italianate belvedere.[1] It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.[3]

Ravenscroft Hall in 1850 when it was owned by Mrs Wade

William Theophilus Buchanan (1793–1865) who built Ravenscroft Hall in 1837 was a member of the wealthy Buchanan family of Hales Hall.[4] His father was John Buchanan of Donally estate in Ireland and his mother was Elizabeth Phillips daughter and heiress of John Phillips of Wavertree, Lancashire.

William was an officer in the 13rd Light Dragoons and fought in many famous battles of the early 19th Century. He was in the Peninsula Wars, and was at the Battles of Bayonne, Orthes and Toulouse. He won a war medal with four clasps for his gallantry in these events.[5] In 1823 he married Eliza Ann Massie, daughter of Reverend Richard Massie of Coddington.[6] The couple had no children. In 1846 they sold the house to Colonel Thomas Francis Wade.[7]

Colonel Thomas Francis Wade (1790–1846) was also in the military and fought in similar battles. In 1816 he married Frances Ann Smythe (1792–1851) who was the daughter of William Smythe of Barbavilla Manor, Collinstown. Thomas died soon after he bought the Hall and Frances became the owner. The book by Twycross called "Views of the Principal Seats in the County of Cheshire" published in 1850 contained a lithograph of the house. It is titled "Ravenscroft the Seat of Mrs Wade".[8] She died in 1851 and her family sold the property to Elkanah Moss.

Later residents

See also

References

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