Oulton Hall
General information
LocationRothwell Lane, Oulton, Leeds, England
Coordinates53°44′42″N 1°27′32″W / 53.745°N 1.459°W / 53.745; -1.459 (grid reference SE3527)
OwnerQHotels
DesignationsGrade II listed
Website
Oulton Hall

Oulton Hall in Oulton, West Yorkshire, is a Grade II listed building in England. It was once the home of the Blayds/Calverley family.[1] After a major fire in 1850 the hall was remodelled, but its fortunes declined until it was revived for use as a hotel. As of 2022, it is a 4 star hotel, part of the QHotels group as Oulton Hall Hotel, Spa & Golf Resort.[2]

History

Oulton Hall was originally a "modest eighteenth-century house" [3] owned by the Blayds family. In 1807 the house was left to John Calverley, who was a partner in Beckett's Bank and Mayor of Leeds in 1798. He changed his name to Blayds in order to inherit the property, but his descendants reverted to Calverley.[4] He enclosed the surrounding common in 1809, and it was landscaped to designs by Humphrey Repton soon afterwards. In around 1822, he commissioned Sir Robert Smirke to remodel the house, and it was enlarged by Smirke's brother, Sydney, in 1839.[5] In 1850 a fire destroyed much of the property, including most of the Smirkes' work.[3] The Leeds firm of Perkin and Backhouse rebuilt the hall, and further work was done in 1875 by Perkin and Sons and in 1885 by Chorley and Cannon of Leeds.[1]

The hall had various uses during the 20th century. In the First World War it was used as a hospital and convalescent home for soldiers diagnosed with neurasthenia. The hall opened as a hospital in July 1918 under the command of Colonel C W E Duncombe to provide care for officers with shell shock.[6] Fifty officers were admitted in 1918, with seventy-one beds available in total. Treatment was focused on confidential talks with the doctor, occupational therapy and a focus on learning, poetry and gardening.[7] The Leeds Education Committee allowed patients to attend classes in the city free of charge. Trips out were organised, with patients travelling to Ilkley, in 1923. The hospital closed in July 1925 and the patients were transferred to Grantham. This decision was unpopular in the press, as it took soldiers much further away from their families and left the North of England without a specialist treatment centre for psychological wounds inflicted by experiences in the First World War.[8]

In 1925 the owners sold the hall and grounds to the county council. It was used as a hospital for psychiatric patients until 1971. Oulton Hall then changed hands, but due to the new owner's lack of resources it fell into disrepair, and in 1974 it was derelict. In 1991 De Vere Hotels acquired the lease and rescued it. Restoration and expansion cost £20 million to turn the hall into a hotel set in an estate of 300 acres (1.2 km2), with gardens, a 27-hole golf course and a spa.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 Historic England. "Oulton Hall, Oulton Park (1184583)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 January 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Welcome to Oulton Hall". Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  3. 1 2 Leach, Peter; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2009). Yorkshire West Riding: Leeds, Bradford and the North. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 621. ISBN 978-0-300-12665-5.
  4. Waugh, Arthur (1911). "Calverley, Charles Stuart" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 70.
  5. Colvin, Howard (2008) [1954]. A Biographical Dictionary of English Architects 1660–1840 (4th ed.). New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 936. ISBN 978-0-300-12508-5.
  6. "Officer's Hospital, Oulton Hall". Yorkshire Post. 24 July 1918.
  7. "Shellshock: Officers Arrive at Oulton Hall". Yorkshire Evening Post. 20 November 1919.
  8. "The Closing of Oulton Hall Hospital". Yorkshire Post. 10 July 1925.
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