Dalton Hall, Cumbria

Dalton Hall is a country house near Burton-in-Kendal, Cumbria (formerly Westmorland) in northern England.

Arms of Hornby of Dalton Hall: Or, two chevronels between three bugle-horns sable stringed gules on a chief of the second as many eagle's legs erased of the first[1]

The hall has been in the ownership of the Hornby family since the late 18th century. Major additions were made to the large Georgian mansion[2] in 1859–60 by Edmund Geoffrey Stanley Hornby (1839-1923), a Deputy Lieutenant for Lancashire,[3] son and heir of Edmund Hornby (1773-1857), MP, to the designs of the Lancaster architect Edward Graham Paley. The building was demolished in 1968 and replaced in 1968–72 by a much smaller new house designed by Clough Williams-Ellis, his last commission.[2][4] Pevsner described it as "a stately doll's house" which "sits inside the ghost of its predecessor".[4] The outbuildings have been converted to serve a number of commercial purposes, including rental cottages, a self-storage facility, and the Dalton Hall Business Centre.[5][6]

Estate

In 2018 the Dalton Estate included three farms:[7]

  • Coat Green Farm – a tenanted mixed dairy farm.
  • Dalton Old Hall – a tenanted mixed beef and sheep farm.
  • Russell Farm – a tenanted farm.

In addition the estate owns the following 18 dwellings:[8]

  • Bell House – 4 bedroom detached house
  • Crow Trees – 3 bedroom detached cottage
  • Burton Lodge – 2 bedroom gate lodge
  • Dalton Lodge – 2 bedroom gate lodge
  • 3 Forestry Houses – 3 bedroom 1950's semi-detached
  • 4 Forestry Houses – 3 bedroom 1950's semi-detached
  • Home Farm – 3 bedroom house – AVAILABLE TO LET
  • Keeper's Cottage – 3 bedroom detached cottage c/w barn
  • 1 Park View 3 bedroom attached cottage
  • 2 Park View – 4 bedroom attached cottage
  • 1 Woodside Cottages – 3 bedroom 1960's semi-detached
  • 2 Woodside Cottages – 3 bedroom 1960's semi-detached
  • Old Post Office Flat, Kirkby Stephen – 2 bedroom apartment

Hornby family

prominent members of the Hornby family include:

See also

References

  1. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p.1156
  2. History, Dalton Hall Business Centre, retrieved 9 June 2011
  3. BLG, 1937, p.1156
  4. Hyde, Matthew; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2010) [1967], Cumbria, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, pp. 209–210, ISBN 978-0-300-12663-1
  5. Estate Properties, Dalton Hall Business Centre, retrieved 9 June 2011
  6. Business Centre, Dalton Hall Business Centre, retrieved 9 June 2011
  7. https://www.daltonhall.co.uk/farms/
  8. https://www.daltonhall.co.uk/cottages/


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