Bredon School

The family sold the house in 1934 to the parents of Richard Seaman, a prominent pre-war racing driver, who lived there until his death in a crash in the 1939 Belgian Grand Prix.

It remains a specialist school with a focus on educating children with specific learning difficulties, such as dyslexia and dyspraxia.

His father, a successful lawyer, had bought Pull Court, and much other property in Worcestershire and neighboring Gloucestershire, in the early 17th century.

[8] Alan Brooks and Nikolaus Pevsner, in their Worcestershire volume of the Buildings of England series, describe Pull Court as "large, competent [and] highly monumental".

[9] Mark Girouard, in his study The Victorian Country House, is less impressed, calling Blore's entrance frontage "weedily symmetrical".

[12][13][14] Tradition ascribes the landscaping of the park around the court to Capability Brown but there is no documentary evidence which supports the claim.