Lechlade Manor

Lechlade Manor
The garden front with "one of Pearson's favourite two-storey bay windows"
TypeHouse
LocationLechlade, Gloucestershire
Coordinates51°41′54″N 1°41′12″W / 51.6982°N 1.6867°W / 51.6982; -1.6867
Built1872–1873
Architectural style(s)Jacobethan
OwnerPrivately owned
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameConvent of St Clotilde
Designated4 July 1985
Reference no.1303277
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameManor Lodge, Lechlade
Designated4 July 1985
Reference no.1155614
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameManor Farmhouse, Lechlade
Designated4 July 1985
Reference no.1089425
Lechlade Manor is located in Gloucestershire
Lechlade Manor
Location of Lechlade Manor in Gloucestershire

Lechlade Manor in Lechlade, Gloucestershire, England, is a Victorian country house built for George Milward, a lawyer, by John Loughborough Pearson. Primarily an ecclesiastical architect, working on over 200 church buildings in his fifty-year career, the manor represents one of Pearson's rare forays into secular building. Dating from 1872 to 1873, Lechlade was subsequently sold to the Sisters of St Clotilde and operated as a convent for much of the 20th century. In the 1990s, it was converted back to a private residence, with some enabling development in the grounds. Lechlade Manor is a Grade II listed building.