The unusual garden front has seven bays, of which the central three are bowed to full height and carry a domed roof.
When Charles à Court Repington sold the Hall in 1910 to Sidney Fisher a local paper manufacturer.
[5] In his youth he served in the navy but when his father died in 1817 he received a large allowance and left the military to help manage the family estate in Heytesbury, where he became a Member of Parliament.
He did not marry, so when he died in 1855 the property was inherited by his younger brother General Charles Ashe A'Court.
General Charles Ashe A'Court (1785-1861) also added the surname Repington when he became the owner of Amington Hall.
Charles Henry Wyndham A’Court Repington (1890-1903) did not live in the house but instead rented it to wealthy tenants.
When he died in 1903 his son Charles à Court Repington inherited the Hall and continued this practice until he sold it in 1910.
Their most notable tenant was Sydney Fisher who rented it from about 1890 and then subsequently bought the property when it was advertised for sale in 1910.