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.