Wrottesley Hall is a 1923-built Grade II listed house in the civil parish of Perton, and historically part of Tettenhall in Staffordshire, England.
The deed is dated sometime between 1160 when Adam became Abbot and 1167 when Simon appears in the Pipe Roll for Staffordshire as lord of Wrottesley[1] A moated Tudor house which stood on the site was demolished in 1686 and replaced by Sir Walter Wrottesley, 3rd Baronet to designs by Christopher Wren, as a four-storeyed 'H' plan mansion, comprising a pedimented central entrance block of three bays and flanking wings of four bays each, standing in a 2,000-acre (8.1 km2) park.
[2] The house was destroyed by fire in 1897 and was replaced with the present structure of more modest proportions in 1923,[3] comprising a two-storey pedimented three bay central block and single storey four bay wings.
Exterior steps and ancillary buildings of the original pre-1897 hall are Grade II listed.
[citation needed] The Wrottesley Golf Course was founded in the 1970s, and still operates today.