Shibden Hall

Shibden Hall

Shibden Hall in 2010
Established 1420
Location Lister’s Road, Halifax, West Yorkshire, England HX3 6XG
Type Historic house museum.
Public transit access Halifax railway station
First Calderdale & Huddersfield (buses)
Arriva Yorkshire (buses)
Halifax Joint Committee (buses)
Website Shibden Hall
Shibden Hall front view
Shibden Hall from the park walk ways.

Shibden Hall is a Grade II* listed historic house located in a public park at Shibden, West Yorkshire, England. The building has been extensively modified from its original design by generations of residents, although its Tudor half-timbered frontage remains its most recognisable feature.

History

The hall dates back to around 1420, when it was recorded as being inhabited by one William Otes.[1] Prior to 1619, the estate was owned by the Savile and Waterhouse families. The three families' armorial symbols are recorded in a stone-mullioned 20-light window at the hall.[2]

For three hundred years (c. 1615-1926) the Shibden estate was in the hands of the Lister family, wealthy mill-owners and cloth merchants, the most famous resident being Anne Lister (1791–1840), who became sole owner of the hall after the death of her aunt. She commissioned York architect John Harper and landscape gardener Samuel Gray in 1830 to make extensive improvements to the house and grounds. A gothic tower was added to the building for use as a library and the major features of the park created, including terraced gardens, rock gardens, cascades and a boating lake.[3] A "Paisley shawl" garden designed for the terrace by Joshua Major was added in the 1850s. On Anne Lister's death in the Caucasus the estate passed to her lesbian lover, Ann Walker, who died insane in an asylum. Possession then returned to the Lister family, who donated it to Halifax Corporation.[4]

The estate became a public park in 1926 and the hall a museum in 1934. The park and gardens were restored between 2007 and 2008 with almost £3.9 million from the Heritage Lottery Fund and £1.2 million from Calderdale Council.[5]

The hall is currently open to the public, the 'West Yorkshire Folk Museum' being housed in an adjoining barn and farm buildings. The hall has a variety of restored workshops, including a brewery, a basket-weaving shop, a tannery, a stable and an extensive collection of horse-drawn carriages. The park also contains a dry stone walling exhibition, children's play area and miniature steam railway.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shibden Hall.
  1. Shibden Hall, Halifax at BBC History Magazine
  2. Shibden Hall: Introduction at Calderdale Council
  3. Shibden Park: Shibden's historic landscape Archived August 28, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. at Calderdale Council
  4. "Shibden Hall". Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  5. Shibden Park: The restoration project Archived July 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. at Calderdale Council

Bibliography

Hanson, T. W., 1934, A Short History of Shibden Hall County Borough of Halifax/William Patterson Printers. 32 pp.

Coordinates: 53°43′41.7″N 1°50′24″W / 53.728250°N 1.84000°W / 53.728250; -1.84000

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