Glossop Hall

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.

Glossop Hall in the 1800s. It was first called Royle Hall. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Manor Park