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Carnfield Hall

Carnfield Hall
Carnfield Hall - geograph.org.uk - 31773.jpg
Carnfield Hall (photograph by Ann Ballinger)
General information
Type Country house
Location South Normanton, Derbyshire
Country England
Coordinates 53°06′00″N 1°21′57″W / 53.0999°N 1.3657°W / 53.0999; -1.3657
Owner Graham Oliver
Website
http://www.carnfieldhall.co.uk

Carnfield Hall is a privately owned country house located at South Normanton, near Alfreton in Derbyshire, England. It is a Grade II* listed building. The estate includes around ninety acres of park and ancient woodland.

The manor was anciently held by the Babington family of Dethick Manor but was sold in about 1502 to Hugh Revell, a younger brother of John Revell of Ogston Hall

Documents relating to the Carnfield estate date from the early 14th century. The earliest parts of the present structure date from the mid 15th century, but the west facing hall was extensively reconstructed in the 1560s by Edward Revell, son of Hugh.

Robert Revell, (High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1700) substantially enlarged and improved the house in about 1710 when a new entrance front was created to the south with an impressive three storey nine bayed gabled facade.

The Grade II listed coachhouse was also built at about this time.

Further reconstructions and additions were made to the hall throughout the 19th century. The architecture of Carnfield Hall is therefore a mix of Elizabethan, Jacobean and Victorian styles.

When Edward Revell died in 1770 the estate passed to his natural son Tristam Revell and on his death in 1797 to a cousin Sir John Eardley Wilmot. Subsequently the Hall had several owners including Joseph Wilson in 1834, Vaughan Radford, and Melville Watson whose widow lived there until 1949 when it was sold to Noel Darbyshire, a local businessman.

Structural damage from mining subsidence caused Carnfield Hall to be abandoned in 1960, and it fell into decline. Despite an attempt to demolish the hall, and a plan to convert it into a hotel, Carnfield was eventually bought by James Cartland in 1987. The hall has been extensively restored by Cartland in the intervening years. James Cartland sold the hall to Graham Oliver in March 2011.


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