[1] The house is historically important because it was here that the Cheshire gentlemen met in 1715 to decide whether to support the Stuarts or the Hanoverians.
They decided on the latter and later commissioned a set of portraits, which now hang in Tatton Hall.
[1] Also listed at Grade II are the gate piers to the forecourt of the building,[3] a carriage house in the forecourt,[4] the kitchen garden wall,[5] and the stable block.
[6] For the 2019 biopic Tolkien, 15 acres of the Tatton Estate were used to recreate the trenches of the First World War.
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