It was located south of Old Glossop at the heart of Glossop, before the centre of the town shifted south to Norfolk Square, near the railway station, in the nineteenth century.
[2] It reverted back to the Ninth Duke of Norfolk when the Standish-Howard line ended in the late 1730s.
[1] The Duke of Norfolk used Glossop Hall as a shooting lodge and so it remained unoccupied for most of the year.
[2] The Hall was renovated c 1850; the left side, south wing, was enlarged but still looked looked very similar and the right, the north wing wall shown, was removed and a wing built matching the left side; the part projecting was built as a chapel with a conical tower.
The original terraced gardens now form Manor Park.