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Wolverhampton's
Architectural Heritage
Grand
Affairs
Tettenhall
Towers

Tettenhall
Towers c. 1875 (N2/TET/E/3)
Tettenhall
Towers, now part of Tettenhall College, is situated in Mount Road
Tettenhall. The Towers date back to the early part of the eighteenth
century when a General Thomas Pearson, a returning Indian nabob
bought land in Tettenhall at the site of the Holly Bush Inn.
General
Pearson built a bungalow
type dwelling on to the side of the old inn.
In 1851
the property was acquired by Captain Thomas Thorneycroft, the son
of Mr GB Thorneycroft the first Mayor of Wolverhampton.
The house became known
as Tettenhall Towers in 1866. Colonel Thorneycroft added a great
hall to the existing buildings, with seating for 500 and electric
light.

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on the image to enlarge
The
Stage, Tettenhall Towers (N2/TET/I/6)

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on the image to enlarge
Cover
of a programme for Thornycroft Cousins 17th/18th April 1888
(DX-174/15)

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on the image to enlarge
The
Great Hall, Tettenhall Towers (N2/TET/I/2)
The hall
has a first floor gallery which was taken from St Peter's Church
following restoration work.
Another
major feature of the great hall is the fireplace:

Click
on the image to enlarge
(N2/TET/I/3)
The
fireplace is set into the wall and goes back under the first floor
gallery. The "firedogs"
are said to have belonged to Queen Elizabeth I. The oak carvings
over the fireplace represent religious subjects.
Suits of armour, heads of deer, African Zulu
assegais
and tiger skin rugs all combined together to produce an impressive
focal point.
The Thorneycroft family lived at Tettenhall Towers until 1943 when
Miss Florence Thorneycroft sold the house and grounds to Tettenhall
College for £15,100
Penn
Hall
Thomas Bradney inherited
Penn Hall estate on the death of Dr Raphael Sedgwick in 1747. Under
the provisions of the will
, Thomas Bradney (or Bookwards Bradney as he was locally known)
was responsible for paying £25 a year to 5
alms-people
and for the cost of erecting and maintaining 5 almshouses.
However Backward was not interested in the almshouses
and it needed a court order in 1760 to make him comply with the
terms of the will.


Penn
Almshouses c. 1960 and after restoration 1985 (J5/PEN)
Thomas
Bradney died in 1782. The building of Penn Hall was completed around
1795, the work being carried out by the architect William Baker
who was later responsible for the rebuilding of the tower of St
Bartholomew's Church, Penn.
By 1843
Penn Hall was owned by William Bradney Persehouse, Backwards Bradney's
grandson. However he did not live there. The hall was occupied by
a Thomas Clark and in 1851 John W Sparrow, an ironmaster, lived
there.
The main
rooms on the ground floor were covered with oak panelling, fine
plasterwork, fireplaces and detailed features over the doors.
Wolverhampton
Corporation acquired the property in 1947 after which the hall was
used as a police hostel.
In April
1974 the Education Committee took over the building and a school
for physically handicapped children was opened. By 1981 a new school
for handicapped children was built in the grounds, while the old
hall was used for children in need of residential
care.
Sedgley
Park Hall
A
Queen Ann mansion
situated near to the Wolverhampton to Dudley Road, the house at
one time belonged to the Hon John Ward; and from 1763 for almost
a century the hall was a Roman Catholic School. The house later
became the Park Hall Hotel.
The house
is of red brick and grey stone rising three stories with a
Queen Ann doorway.
©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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