Dilhorne Hall

It succeeded a 17th-century house that had been the home of Copwood Hollins (who died in 1705) and, in the later 18th century, John Holliday.

[1] In the early 1980s Dilhorne Recreational Institute had been built on the site of the demolished Hall.

The grounds of the former hall are now a park, playground and Crown green bowling club.

The old gatehouse to Dilhorne Hall still stands at the entrance to the park and has been renovated to become a private house.

[citation needed] The Baronetcy of Dilhorne in the County of Stafford was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom on 20 January 1866 for Edward Manningham-Buller.

The gatehouse of Dilhorne Hall which is the only part of the Hall remaining