Rushbrooke Hall

Rushbrooke Hall
Rushbrooke Hall drawn in 1818.
Rushbrooke Hall is located in Suffolk
Rushbrooke Hall
Location within Suffolk
General information
Architectural styleTudor architecture
LocationEngland
Town or cityRushbrooke, West Suffolk
Coordinates52°12′57.96″N 0°45′58.68″E / 52.2161000°N 0.7663000°E / 52.2161000; 0.7663000
Demolished
  • mid-16th century
  • 1961

Entrance to Rushbrooke Hall, photograph published in 1904

Rushbrooke Hall was a British stately home in Rushbrooke, Suffolk.[1][2] For several hundred years it was the family seat of the Jermyn family. It was demolished in 1961.

  1. ^ Haslewood, F. (1891). "Rushbrooke Hall" (PDF). Suffolk Institute of Archaeology & History. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  2. ^ "Rushbrooke, Suffolk". visionofbritain.org.uk. University of Portsmouth. Retrieved 27 August 2023. The Hall is a splendid moated mansion; formsthree sides of a quadrangle; is partly of the time of King John, partly of that of Elizabeth; contains a drawing-room in which Elizabeth held courts in 1578; includesan old chapel, now used as a billiard-room; and stands in an extensive and well-wooded park.