- Source: Gorse Hall
Gorse Hall was the name given to two large houses in Stalybridge, Greater Manchester, England, on a hill bordering Dukinfield (now in Tameside, but until March 1974 in Cheshire), with 35 acres of woodland, and views of the Cheshire Plain and the Pennine Hills. Gorse Hall is a location in Anthony Trollope's Marion Fay (1882).
History
Tradition has, it was named for the abundance of common gorse (Ulex europaeus) which formerly grew in the area.
The history of the place is not well known. Friends of Gorse Hall is trying to research the historical importance of the site.
= Old Gorse Hall
=The first house, Old Gorse Hall, can be traced back to the 17th century and it probably dates from even earlier. Its ruins can still be seen. The Hall was once part of the manor of Dockenfeld held by Lieutenant–Colonel Robert Duckenfield, a Parliamentarian soldier in the English Civil War.
Upon the death of Lady Dukinfield Daniel in 1762, Gorse Hall passed on to her husband, artist John Astley (1720?–1787). From him it passed to his relative Francis Dukinfield Astley, a great sportsman; a hunter's tower was built in 1807.
= New Gorse Hall
=John Leech, who was one of the many wealthy cotton manufacturers of the district, bought some of the land attached to the Hall from John Astley to build his mills, the ruins of which can still be seen.
New Gorse Hall was built by John Leech in 1836. Today, both houses are ruined. Their grounds cover approximately 35 acres (140,000 m2) of meadow and woodland and are now maintained by a local community group called the Friends of Gorse Hall, established in 1999, which has leased the site from the local authority, Tameside. The aim of the Friends of Gorse Hall is to promote the site for leisure, and educational uses.
Leech's son John, bought the remainder of the estate and with stones from the local quarries built the mansion called the New Gorse Hall in 1836. John had eight children, one of whom, Helen Leech, born at Gorse Hall, was the mother of Beatrix Potter, the famous children’s author. In reference to this, there is a statue in the grounds of a small Rabbit.
"Beatrix Potter would often write and draw while visiting her family at Gorse Hall"
Murder
On 1 November 1909, Gorse Hall was the site of a murder when local mill owner George Harry Storrs was stabbed to death. Two "identical" ex-soldiers, Cornelius Howard, a relative, and Mark Wilde, were tried, with the same defense attorney, but neither resulted in a conviction. A year after the murder, In the summer of 1910, his widow, Mrs. Maggie Storrs had Gorse Hall torn down, with the stone reused elsewhere, she moved away, to
Morecambe Bay, never to return.
The case is examined in The Stabbing of George Harry Storrs by Jonathan Goodman. and featured in an episode of the television series In Suspicious Circumstances, in 1995, and Julian Fellowes Investigates: A Most Mysterious Murder, in 2005.
Present day
All that remains at this site is an old fireplace, standing alone in a concrete clearing, and floor foundations, painted a mixture of green, blue and red to show the outline of the home and where the disaster happened. Friends of Gorse Hall manage the grounds.
Disambiguation
Gorse Hall Primary School, Forester Drive, Stalybridge (across from former Age UK Site).
Gorse Hall, on the old Chorley to Blackburn road, Whittle-le-Woods
Gorse Hall Rock, Lancashire geological feature
Further reading
Sully, Clifford (1925). Mistaken Identity. Longmans, Green, and Company. Gorse Hall
Brend, WA (1913). "The futility of the coroner's inquest" (PDF). The Lancet. 181 (4681): 1404–1408. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)52106-0. Retrieved 7 August 2022. via scholar.archive.org
Dabundo, Laura; Hitchcock, James (1995). "Murder as One of the Liberal Arts [with replies]". The American Scholar. 64 (1): 156. ISSN 0003-0937. JSTOR 41212305.
Hitchcock, James (1994). "CRIME: Murder as One of the Liberal Arts". The American Scholar. 63 (2): 277–285. ISSN 0003-0937. JSTOR 41212245. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
Hardwicke, Glyn (1974) The Gorse Hall Mystery - a New Look at an Old Case, 42 Medico-Legal J. 14 HeinOnline doi:10.1177/002581727404200103
Luckombe, Philip (1791). The Beauties of England ... The Fifth Edition, Enlarged. W. Richardson. Gorse Hall
Journal of the Derbyshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. The Society. 1897. There are also four more halls, as Clattercotes Hall, Overton Hall, Gorse Hall, and Stubbing Edge Hall. Pearsons lived at Gorse Hall.
Tilley, Joseph (1899). The Old Halls, Manors and Families of Derbyshire: The Scarsdale Hundred. Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent. Gorse Hall....Joseph Tilley (of Derby Eng.)
References
External links
The Friends of Gorse Hall
The Friends of Gorse Hall — Tameside History Forum
Friends of Gorse Hall — Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council
"In Suspicious Circumstances": The Golden Goose (1995) — IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Preston Timur, Sussex Barat
- Gorse Hall
- Murder of George Harry Storrs
- Gorse (disambiguation)
- Stalybridge
- List of unsolved murders in the United Kingdom (before 1970)
- Ashlan Gorse Cousteau
- List of unsolved murders (1900–1979)
- Ashton Town Hall
- Hyde Hall, Denton
- Hartshead Pike