Dalton Hall, Cumbria

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]

Dalton Hall is a country house near Burton-in-Kendal in northern England. The hall lies within the county palatine of Lancaster, while Burton lies in the historic county of Westmorland. Both have formed part of Cumbria since 1974.

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]

  1. ^ Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p.1156
  2. ^ a b History, Dalton Hall Business Centre, retrieved 9 June 2011
  3. ^ BLG, 1937, p.1156
  4. ^ a b 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