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Otterburn Hall

Otterburn Hall
Otterburn Hall Hotel lounge.jpg
Otterburn Hall is located in Northumberland
Otterburn Hall
General information
Architectural style Neo-Elizabethan style
Location Near Otterburn, Northumberland, England
Coordinates 55°14′35″N 2°11′4″W / 55.24306°N 2.18444°W / 55.24306; -2.18444Coordinates: 55°14′35″N 2°11′4″W / 55.24306°N 2.18444°W / 55.24306; -2.18444
Current tenants Hotel
Completed 1086
1830
Technical details
Structural system Brick with stone

Otterburn Hall is an English country house and estate in Otterburn, Northumberland. It is situated in 500 acres (200 ha) of deer park and woodland in the Northumberland National Park, northeastern England. The building was constructed in 1870 for Lord James Douglas, the land given to him as recompense for the death of Lord James Douglas, who fought at the Battle of Otterburn, and was killed near Otterburn Tower (originally a castle), itself founded in 1086, and rebuilt in 1830. Both Otterburn Hall and Otterburn Castle have been seats of landed gentry.

From 1980 to 2012, Otterburn Hall was used as a hotel. The house is Grade-II listed with English Heritage, and rated with four-stars by the Architectural Association School of Architecture.

The English country house is situated in the Redesdale valley in a rural national park. It is north of Otterburn in Northumberland, and 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Cramlington. The hall's estate encompasses an area of 500 acres (200 ha) of deer park and woodland. An 8 miles (13 km) stretch of the River Rede flows close to the estate. There are several historical buildings nearby, including Otterburn Church, built in 1857; Otterburn Tower, a Grade II listed castellated mansion built in 1830 at the site of a medieval tower whose vestiges no longer remain; and Otterburn Mill, which dates to the 1800s.


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