eaw024596 ENGLAND (1949). Coton Hall, Alveley, 1949

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (6)

EAW024596
  0° 0m
EAW024597
  300° 25m
EAW024598
  292° 35m
EAW024599
  297° 40m
EAW024601
  276° 96m
EAW024600
  210° 130m

Details

Title [EAW024596] Coton Hall, Alveley, 1949
Reference EAW024596
Date 11-July-1949
Link
Place name ALVELEY
Parish ALVELEY
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 377384, 286335
Longitude / Latitude -2.3329980690658, 52.474107701446
National Grid Reference SO774863

Pins

Woman with child waving at the plane.

totoro
Friday 25th of April 2014 05:12:21 PM
The ruinous chapel in the grounds (possibly 13th C) was made more picturesque by the insertion of a gothick east window around 1765. In 1878 the chapel roof collapsed and all the Lee monuments were moved to Alveley church.

totoro
Friday 25th of April 2014 05:07:20 PM

User Comment Contributions

Coton Hall, Alveley, Shropshire WV15 6ES

Grade 2 listed building - English Heritage Building ID: 254270

Privzte property - no public access but footpaths nearby. 21stC redeveloped. Listed as "flats" in 2011.



A large early C19 house built for Harry Lancelot Lee with Early Victorian additions on left

Coton Hall is the ancestral home of the Lee family, and there has been a house on this site since the Middle Ages.

General Robert E Lee (American Civil War) is of this family. Some years later he received a Presidential Pardon from President Jimmy Carter.

Also from this family Richard Henry and Francis Lightfoot Lee, were the only brothers to sign the Declaration of Independence.

The property was sold from the Lee family in 1821.



The ruinous chapel in the grounds (possibly 13th C) was made more picturesque by the insertion of a gothick east window around 1765. In 1878 the chapel roof collapsed and all the Lee monuments were moved to Alveley church.



In the mid-18th century, work had already been done to the surrounds of Coton Hall.



The house's cellar is two storeys deep and in the lower of the two levels includes the entrance to a tunnel. According to the estate agent FPD Savills, the tunnel runs all the way to Alveley village two miles away, although it's been concreted off beyond the chapel for safety reasons.

totoro
Friday 25th of April 2014 05:06:21 PM