Oakley Hall, Staffordshire
Oakley Hall is an early 18th century 14,929 sf mansion house at Mucklestone, near to Market Drayton, Staffordshire. It is a Grade II* listed building.[1]
The Chetwode family who from about the 13th century owned the Chetwode Manor estate in Buckinghamshire also held the manor of Oakley. There was a substantial manor house at Oakley in the 16th century.
In about 1710 Sir John Chetwode Bt., (High Sheriff of Staffordshire in 1691 and 1698) replaced the old house with a two-storey mansion. The house is built of brick on a sandstone plinth with a balustraded entrance front of eleven bays, the central three of which were pedimented. Two sphinx-like statues with female heads flank the main entrance.
The 1881 census discloses the 6th Baronet and his family in residence with a staff of fifteen servants. The Chetwodes sold the estate in 1919. It was already by then in the family of Cyril Charles Dennis, High Sheriff of Staffordshire (wife Mary Scott Dennis [nee Macfie], who kept 21 members of staff and was rsponsible for putting ventral heating throughout the hall. He had sons: Ian and Lance (grandsons: Hon Professor Dr Roger L H Dennis BA, PhD, DSc (Dunelm) FLS, FRSB, FRSG, FRES [Internationally recognised butterfly biologist] and Cyril T H Dennis Esq.,BSc, BA, MA, VetMB, MRCVS (Camb) [Veterinary Surgeon and Oriental ceramics expert]), daughters Mary [grandson: Martin Peel Esq. and Primrose) until 1948 when he retired to the dower house, Park House Villa in the grounds where he died in 1964). The family holds two coats of Arms, the Dennis Family reflecting their link with the Norman landing and being bestowed lands by William Ist; and his wife a descendant of the Kings of Dalriada. The family built their fortunes in the 18th and 19th centuries in the chemical industry (Bordeaux Mixture and sugar industry).
References
- Historic England. "Oakley Hall & Pair of Sphinxes Framing East Entrance (1205760)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2014.