Caverswall Castle | |
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Caverswall, Staffordshire, England | |
Caverswall Castle, 1845
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Coordinates | 52°58′57″N 2°04′33″W / 52.9825°N 2.0759°WCoordinates: 52°58′57″N 2°04′33″W / 52.9825°N 2.0759°W |
Grid reference | grid reference SJ950428 |
Type | Mansion, built within older castle |
Site information | |
Owner | Private ownership |
Condition | Intact |
Site history | |
Materials | Stone |
Caverswall Castle is a privately owned early 17th-century English mansion built in a castellar style upon the foundations and within the walls of a 13th-century medieval castle. It is a Grade I listed building in Caverswall, Staffordshire. The castle is large, with a floor area of 2,030 square yards (1,700 m2).
In ancient times, the manor of Caverswall was held by the eponymous Caverswall family, who in 1275 were granted licence to crenellate their manor house. The resulting medieval moated castle was approximately rectangular in plan with four angle towers and a keep within the curtain walls.
In the 15th century the castle, which was owned by the Caverswall family, became the seat of the Montgomery family, three of whom served as High Sheriff of Staffordshire. During the English Civil War it was garrisoned by parliamentary forces and was much decayed and neglected by the end of the 17th century.
The neglected castle was purchased in 1615 by Matthew Cradock of Stafford, a local wool merchant, first mayor of Stafford in 1614 and Member of Parliament for Stafford in 1621. He built the present mansion house retaining the old castle walls, to a design, it is said, of Robert Smythson or John Smythson. The three storey house has five bays each with stone mullioned and transomed windows. There is a castellated parapet and an entrance porch
When the Cradock male line failed the estate was sold in 1655 to William Joliffe (High Sheriff of Staffordshire for 1663) but the eventual heir William Vane, 2nd Viscount Vane, was forced to sell it. Thereafter the castle had several owners. In 1811 it was occupied as a nunnery by a Benedictine order who sold it in 1853 to Sir Perceval Radcliffe. It belonged in the 1880s to the Wedgwood family. In 1891 it was purchased by W.E. Bowers who carried out extensive renovations and much improved the property. W.A. Bowers then sold it in 1933 to the Sisters of the Holy Ghost, who in turn sold it in 1965 to another convent, the Daughters of the House of Mary. When they left in 1977 the Castle was sold in various lots. More recently it was bought in 2006 by property tycoon Robin MacDonald for £1.7m who spent £1 million renovating it.