Kirklees Hall

53°41′46″N 1°44′34″W / 53.69611°N 1.74278°W / 53.69611; -1.74278

Kirklees Hall Gatehouse

Kirklees Hall is a 16th-century Grade I listed[1] Jacobean hall, close to the English village of Clifton in Calderdale, West Yorkshire.

The first evidence of a hall constructed at Kirklees was that of Sir Thomas Gargrave, who conveyed the property to the Pilkington family.[2]

After the estate was acquired by the up-and-coming Armytage family, the stone built hall was altered c.1770 by John Carr for the Sir George Armytage, 3rd Baronet. The Armytage family went on to occupy the hall for several generations.

Lady Armytage (d: 2008 aged 81), sold the property in 1983 and moved into Priory Gardens a property she built within Kirklees Park estate adjacent to Old Farm (formerly Low Hall) and the Kirklees Priory site. The former gatehouse part of the Old Farm (Low Hall) complex can still be seen, though the site is on private land and has no public access.

Kirklees Hall and grounds designed after Francis Richardson are now a collection of luxury residences set in 18 acres and are annexed from Kirklees Park estate which are private with no public access.

  1. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1184034)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 April 2008.
  2. ^ Historic Mansions of Yorkshire and Their Associations, Vol. 2, William Wheeler, Published by Richard Jackson, Fine Art Publishers, Leeds, 1889