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Harvington
Hall
The moated island was made about 1260 and parts of the Hall are medieval, but
most of it was built by Humphrey Pakington about 1580. Many rooms have their
orignal Elizabethan wallpaper. Humphrey Pakington was a catholic, the Hall
contains the best surviving series of priest holes in the country. Four of them
seem to be the work of the master-builder of hides, Nicholas Owen, who was
arrested at Hindlip, near Worcester, in 1606 and tortured to death in the Tower
of London. Nevertheless, Humphrey held a post in the household of Lord
Chancellor Ellesmere and the family letters refer to politics, London
fashions and rare plants acquired from the royal gardener Tradescant, as well as
to coach mares, the bribing of juries, medical treatment and lamprey pies.In
1696, on the death of Humphrey's daughter Mary, Lady Yate, Harvington was
inherited by the Throckmortons of Coughton in Warwickshire who demolished two
sides of the courtyard and made minor alterations elsewhere. In 1743 they
replaced the old domestic chapel by a larger one in the garden, which was
restored in 1986-87 with a Georgian altar and chamber organ. The present church,
which contains a Regency organ and a fine modern bronze by Faith Tolkien, was
built by the Throckmortons in 1825. The Georgian then became village school.
Later in the 19th century, the hall was stripped of furniture and panelling and
the shell was left almost derelict. In 1923 it was bought for the Roman Catholic
Archdiocese of Birmingham which restored it and opened it to the public. Among
other activities, it is now the centre of a music festival every July and of a
pilgrimage every August. Since the Hall has been little altered since the early
18th century, it is an ideal site for teaching Tudor and Stuart history i n
accordance with the National Curriculum.
The Spooks N Specters site says only:
The grounds of Harvington Hall are haunted by the ghost of Mistress Hicks who
was hanged at the cross-roads after being accused of witchcraft.
Thanks
to Kyla Jones for submitting this information
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