| Shuttleworth Hall | |
|---|---|
|
Shuttleworth Hall from the front
|
|
| Location | Hapton, Lancashire |
| Coordinates | 53°47′10″N 2°19′47″W / 53.7861°N 2.3296°WCoordinates: 53°47′10″N 2°19′47″W / 53.7861°N 2.3296°W |
|
Listed Building – Grade I
|
|
| Official name: Shuttleworth Hall | |
| Designated | 1 April 1953 |
|
Listed Building – Grade II*
|
|
| Official name: Arched gateway and garden wall attached to south front of Shuttleworth Hall | |
| Designated | 12 February 1985 |
Shuttleworth Hall is a 17th-century manor house (and later farmhouse) in the civil parish of Hapton in Lancashire, England. It is protected as a Grade I listed building.
The oldest part of the house dates from the early to mid-17th century. An inscription over the outer doorway to the porch contains the date of 1639. Although historians have supposed that the house was a residence of the Shuttleworth family of Gawthorpe Hall in Padiham, Shuttleworth Hall's connection to that branch of the family is unclear. By 1856, the building was described as a farmhouse, and it now consists of two separate dwellings. In April 1953, the house was designated a Grade I listed building. The Grade I listing is for buildings "of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important". The garden wall and arched gateway are also separately designated with a Grade II* listing.
The house is constructed of coursed rubble sandstone with roofs of stone slate. Its plan is H-shaped and it is built on two stories. Most of the windows have mullions and transoms; the hall windows are not mullioned. A garden to the south (front) of the house is enclosed by a wall with a segmental-arched gateway.