Hackensall Hall, also known as Hackensall Hall Farmhouse, is an historic building on Whinny Lane in Preesall, Lancashire, England. It is Grade II listed, built in 1873.[1]

Hackensall Hall
The building in 2011, looking south
LocationWhinny Lane, Preesall,
Lancashire,
England
Coordinates53°55′14″N 2°59′35″W / 53.92057°N 2.99317°W / 53.92057; -2.99317
AreaBorough of Wyre
Built1873 (151 years ago) (1873)
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated3 October 1984
Reference no.1361845
Hackensall Hall is located in the Borough of Wyre
Hackensall Hall
Location of Hackensall Hall in the Borough of Wyre
Hackensall Hall is located in Lancashire
Hackensall Hall
Hackensall Hall (Lancashire)

A remodelling of a 17th-century house, it retains much of its earlier fabric. It is in pebbledashed brick with sandstone dressings and a slate roof, and has two storeys with attics. The house has an irregular plan with rear wings and outshuts. Most of the windows are mullioned and transomed, or mullioned. Other features include a single-storey gabled porch, a doorway with a moulded surround and a Tudor arched head, and a re-set inscribed plaque. Inside the house is an inglenook.[2][1]

Francis Fleetwood, brother of Richard, built Hackensall Hall in 1656 after their home at Rossall Hall was flooded.[3] Nearby Parrox Hall was built about the same time, and has been in the possession of the Elletson family since 1690.[4]

Dorothy Parkinson

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Dorothy Parkinson, who created the first example of Preesall salt, lived at the farm up until her death in 1925. She raised nine children there.

In 1926, Parkinson's husband, John, found over three hundred Roman coins in the hall's grounds. They were estimated to date to around 273 AD.[5]

Architectural detail

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Farm buildings

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Historic England & 1361845
  2. ^ Hartwell & Pevsner (2009), p. 360
  3. ^ Porter, John (1876). History of the Fylde of Lancashire. W. Porter.
  4. ^ A History of Blackpool, the Fylde and South Wyre – Nick Moore (2018), p. 63
  5. ^ A History of Blackpool, the Fylde and South Wyre – Nick Moore (2018), p. 1263

Sources

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