Slade Hall

Work was completed by 1585, as evidenced by an inscription on a beam over the porch, which also has the initials of the builder, E. S., for Edward Siddall.

[2] Slade Hall was offered for sale at auction in 2002, and was bought by property developer Mel Evans for £527,000.

A porch in the angle between the main gable and the southern wing has painted lozenges resembling quatrefoils.

Plaster friezes are still visible in the first-floor chamber above the hall,[7] described by architectural historian Norman Redhead as "crude 16th-century stuff".

They depict mainly heraldic motifs, including the Elizabethan coat of arms and the Siddall family's crest, but also an "entertaining" hunting scene.

Old drawing of Slade Hall showing the east front