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Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England



 


Notes:
The monument is the site of a 12th to 17th century moated house called Sharrow Hall, and includes the moated site together with a complex of earthworks representing the remains of enclosures, a sample of ridge and furrow, a dovecote and a road and driveway. Further ridge and furrow and traces of the road also survive beyond the monument but have not been included in the scheduling. The moated site consists of a roughly rectangular platform measuring about 50m by 20m, enclosed by a moat or ditch with an average width of 8m and a current depth of c.0.75m. Set approximately 5m in from the east end of the platform is a depression measuring roughly 5m by 10m which may indicate the site of a cellar. A channel links the north west corner of the moat with the stream to the west. Because of the level of the site it is unlikely that the moat was ever waterfilled. Instead, together with the channel, it would have been used to drain the site.


Excavation at the west end of the moat by the Derbyshire Archaeological Society in the early 1980s revealed roof tile and pottery dating from the 12th to the 17th centuries. This indicates a long period of occupation. Earthworks confirm that a wide range of ancillary features existed round the moated site. They include a rectangular platform, flanking the drainage channel noted above, measuring approximately 25m wide by 40m long by 1m high, which is interpreted as the site of a range of buildings whose outer walls survive as low linear earthworks with gaps marking the location of doorways. In addition, south of the moated site, is a slightly sunken enclosure with a roughly 20cm square building platform inside its south west corner. This enclosure measures approximately 40m square and is bounded on all but the south side by a prominent bank measuring up to 5m wide and 2m high. This bank is interpreted as the remains of a wall and suggests that the enclosure was either a walled courtyard or, alternatively, a garden. The wall divides the enclosure from the moated site and also continued up the west side of the moat. South of this enclosure is a linear sunken feature measuring approximately 140m long by 15m wide by 1.5m deep. In the past, this feature has been interpreted as a fishpond because it lies on a former stream line.

However, though it may have originated as one or a number of ponds, in its present form it appears to have been a driveway providing access to the enclosure south of the moat by linking up with a lane which, until about 50 years ago, passed north to south through the east side of the moated site. This lane, known as Chapel Lane but referred to locally as the Coach Road, currently survives as a flat-bottomed linear depression varying between 8m and 18m wide. A circular mound at the junction of the lane and driveway may represent a turning circle for carriages. The lane can also be traced in fields north of the moated site. Another circular earthwork, comprising a low 9m wide mound surrounded by a wall-trench, occurs north of the driveway, west of the enclosure. Its dimensions and shape indicate that it may be the remains of a dovecote which is known to have existed in the early 17th century, having been referred to in a letter dated 31 May 1603.

Other features surrounding the moated site include a number of banked and ditched enclosures which will have served a variety of purposes. These may have included pleasure gardens as well as kitchen gardens and paddocks. In addition, both the field south of the driveway and the enclosures west and north east of the moated site all retain faint but distinct traces of ridge and furrow, the earthworks left by medieval and post- medieval ploughing.

Although the finds made by the Derbyshire Archaeological Society indicate a 12th century origin for the moated site, little is known about its early history except that it was occupied by the Pipard family. In the mid-15th century it was leased or otherwise held from the Pipards by John Peche (Peachy). During the 16th century it was acquired by William Twyford, who became known as `of Sharrow Hall', and subsequently passed to the Gregson family through the marriage of William's sole heir Anne to Thomas Gregson. In 1603, in the letter mentioned above, Francis Coke of Trusley tells John Coke that `There is on it a very pretty house and a dovecote...'. At this time, Sharrow Hall was to let and may have been in disrepair since, in a will dated 1604, Alice Gregson left the ceiling of the parlour and the glass in the windows to her son, Henry.

The final record of the hall seems to be in a conveyance of land dated 2 June 1640 in which it is listed with several other properties. Reused timbers in present day Sharrow Hall Farm are thought to have originated from the moated hall. Excluded are all modern gates and fences, although the ground underneath is included.

Location : Latitude: 52.92971121460957, Longitude: -1.6479524685272837


Birth

Matches 1 to 1 of 1

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID 
1 JEFFERY, Henry  24 Apr 1884Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I19878

Death

Matches 1 to 1 of 1

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Death    Person ID 
1 HEATHCOTE, Jane  1869Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I2978

Census

Matches 1 to 11 of 11

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Census    Person ID 
1 HEATHCOTE, Jane  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I2978
2 HEATHCOTE, Jane  1861Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I2978
3 JEFFERY, Ann Dale  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I4902
4 JEFFERY, George  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I4103
5 JEFFERY, George  1861Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I4103
6 JEFFERY, John  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I7773
7 JEFFERY, Mary  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I3849
8 JEFFERY, Sarah  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I5942
9 JEFFERY, Thomas  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I5306
10 JEFFERY, William  1841Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I1001
11 JEFFERY, William  1861Sharrow Hall, Osleston, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England I1001

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