Condover Hall

Condover Hall
North elevation of Condover Hall
North elevation of Condover Hall
Condover Hall is located in Shropshire
Condover Hall
Location within Shropshire
General information
Architectural styleElizabethan
Town or cityCondover, Shropshire
CountryUnited Kingdom
Coordinates52°38′47″N 02°44′52″W / 52.64639°N 2.74778°W / 52.64639; -2.74778
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameCondover Hall
Designated3 November 1955
Reference no.1055706[1]
Official nameCondover Hall
Designated3 November 1955
Reference no.1001118[2]
GradeII

Condover Hall is a Grade I listed three-storey Elizabethan sandstone building, described as the grandest manor house in Shropshire, standing in a conservation area on the outskirts of Condover village, Shropshire, England, four miles south of the county town of Shrewsbury.

A Royal manor in Anglo Saxon times, until the 16th century Condover Manor was in and out of Crown Tenure. In 1586 it was purchased by Thomas Owen, a Member of Parliament for, and Recorder of, Shrewsbury, from the family of the previous owner, Henry Vynar, a London merchant who had died in 1585. Owen had had a lease of the manor from 1578, and been in lawsuit with the family.[3]

For over sixty years from 1946 the hall was run as a residential school, initially for blind children when owned by the RNIB and latterly under private ownership as a school for autistic children, covering boy boarders and coeducational day pupils. The school and college both closed during 2009. The house has subsequently been re-opened as an activity centre.

  1. ^ Historic England. "Condover Hall (Grade I) (1055706)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  2. ^ Historic England. "Condover Hall (Grade II) (1001118)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  3. ^ Pugh, R.B., ed. (1968). Victoria County History of Shropshire, Volume VIII. Oxford University Press. p. 39.