Gledhow Hall
History
Gledhow Hall was built on what was monastic land, the property of Kirkstall Abbey. The abbey was the major landowner in the Allerton area in the 13th century. The abbey lands were seized by the Crown in 1539 at the Dissolution of the Monasteries. John Thwaites bought the land and built a house in the 17th century.
Jeremiah Dixon bought Gledhow Hall in 1764. He engaged John Carr, who extensively remodelled the Hall and estate for three years to 1767.
J. M. W. Turner painted a watercolour view of the hall in about 1816, staying at the house while he made preparatory sketches.
James Kitson, 1st Baron Airedale bought the estate in 1885. Kitson employed Leeds architects Chorley and Connon, for further changes.
During the First World War, the Albert Kitson, 2nd Baron Airedale offered the Hall as a VAD Hospital. His cousin, Olive Middleton, great-grandmother of Princess of Wales, worked there as auxiliary nurse.
The Barons Airedale sold Gledhow Hall after the Second World War, moving to Ufford Hall, Cambridgeshire, after Malcolm Wolryche–Whitmore who left it to his nephew Oliver Kitson, 4th Baron Airedale, on his death in 1940.
Dixon of Gledhow
John Dixon (1726–1782) descended from William Dixon of Heaton Royds (1535–1608). He married Frances Gower, heiress of Sir Thomas Gower, 2nd Baronet, in 1752.
Their only son, Jeremiah Dixon (FRS), High Sheriff of Yorkshire, remodelled Gledhow in the 1760s. Dixon added the Manor of Chapel Allerton in 1765, and the estates of Lady Dawes. He built Alfred's Castle, a folly in Leeds.
Heir John Dixon (1753–1824) was High Sheriff of Yorkshire, Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lieutenant for West Riding. He held estates at Gledhow and Weeting Hall, and Astle Hall via his wife, Lydia Parker, whom he married in 1784. Dixon was educated at Oxford (B.A. 1776), admitted to the bar at Lincoln's Inn and to the Society for Constitutional Information in 1783. After the Napoleonic Wars, John Dixon preferred his estate in Weeting, Norfolk, eventually selling Gledhow Hall in 1817. Second son, also Jeremiah Dixon (1754-?) was Mayor of Leeds in 1784, lived at Fell Foot, and married Mary Smeaton. Third son, Henry Dixon, is ancestor of the present Marchioness of Blandford, marrying Catherine Townley Plumbe of the Tempest family in 1794.
Heir John Dixon (1799–1873) of Gledhow married Sophia Tatton, of Wythenshawe Hall, at Astle Hall.
George Dixon, 1st Bt Dixon of Astle, was born in 1842 at Astle Hall. [See Dixon baronets, of Astle (1919)].
Gledhow was sold to James Kitson, 1st Baron Airedale in 1885.
Barons Airedale
By 1885, James Kitson, 1st Baron Airedale, industrial magnate, founder of the Kitson Airedale locomotive foundries and notable figure in the Liberal party, had purchased the hall and was living there. Between 1885 and 1890, the hall was altered and extended by architects, Chorley and Connon.
Albert Kitson, 2nd Baron Airedale succeeded to the title and the estate on his father's death in 1911. The Kitsons entertained several Liberal Prime Ministers and their families at Gledhow: William Gladstone and his son, H. H. Asquith and his wife in 1913, and in 1920, Margaret Lloyd George when she was in Leeds for a reception of women supporters of the wartime coalition.
VAD hospital
After the outbreak of the First World War, Lord Airedale offered the hall for use as a Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) hospital. Run by the British Red Cross, it was staffed by both professional and VAD nurses. The hospital opened in 1915 and his cousin Edith Cliff was its commandant (officer in charge) throughout the war. She kept a scrapbook, The Great European War, Gledhow Hall Hospital, documenting life there between 1915 and 1919.
The scrapbook, filled with "photographs, newscuttings, letters and ephemera" is held by Leeds Libraries as one of its most important treasures The scrapbook was chosen for the UK-wide Digital War Memorial, hosted by Historypin, a user-generated archive in 2014. Community groups from local libraries, guided by an artist, worked to "find the voice" of the scrapbook and explore themes around it, visited and photographed Gledhow Hall including its faience bathroom.
Description
The two-storey house is built in stone ashlar, with chamfered quoins, cornices, a balustraded parapet, and a hipped roof in slate and lead with a tall chimney stack. The south front has two two-storey canted bay windows with three sash windows between them. The centrally-placed doorway has a Gibbs surround, a fanlight and a pediment and is accessed by stone steps. The extension by Chorley and Connon at the rear has three bays, two pairs of Ionic columns forming a loggia, and a porch in the corner with Tuscan columns, over which is an oriel window.
The main entrance through the rear loggia has paired panelled doors glazed in stained glass with fruit and butterfly motifs. The entrance hall has mosaic floor and has been partition for flats. The stone cantilevered staircase has a wrought-iron scrolled balustrade and a mahogany handrail. The top-lit stair well retains eight lunette windows, each with stained glass representing foliage, flowers and fruit. On the first floor is the tiled bathroom from 1885. The elaborate faience (glazed architectural terra-cotta) bathroom in Burmantofts Pottery was created for a visit from the Prince of Wales. The bathroom has panelled mahogany doors and a bolection moulded fireplace. The walls are covered with moulded tiles in brown, blue and white, with a dado, moulded rail, scrolled frieze and a dentilled cornice. The ceiling is tiled in a strapwork design and has three diamond-shaped vents. The adjacent toilet is similarly decorated.
Jeremiah Dixon built the bridge over Gledhow Lane to the pleasure gardens in 1768, and the Gledhow ice-house. Dixon planted large scale plantations, introducing Swiss or Aphernously Pine, which became known as the Gledhow Pine.
See also
References
- ^ Historic England. "Gledhow Hall (1256270)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
- ^ "Gledhow" (PDF). gledhow.elastic-media.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 August 2021. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
- ^ Burke, Bernard (1879). A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Great Britain & Ireland. Harold B. Lee Library. London, Harrison. p. 462.
- ^ "Gledhow Valley Conservation Area Appraisal" (PDF). Leeds City Council. p. 2. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
- ^ Hill, David (2008). Turner and Leeds – Image and Industry. Northern Arts Publications 2008. p. 99. ISBN 9781906600310. Retrieved 11 August 2013.
- ^ "JOSEPH MALLORD WILLIAM TURNER, R.A. | GLEDHOW HALL, YORKSHIRE | Old Master Day Sale including Old Master Paintings, Drawings and British Works on Paper | 2020". Sotheby's. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
- ^ "Pedigree of Yorkshire Families, Volume 1 West Riding" (PDF). ia800405.us.archive.org.
- ^ "Sarah Roundell - Dame Sarah Dawes (1709-1773)" (PDF). www.escrickheritage.org.
- ^ "A History of Gledhow". Yorkshire Gardens Trust. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
- ^ "Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715-1886/Dixon, John (3) - Wikisource, the free online library". en.wikisource.org. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
- ^ "Dixon, John | Ed Pope History". edpopehistory.co.uk. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
- ^ "The history of Fell Foot – Lake District". National Trust. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
- ^ Boswell, David M. (1994). The Kitsons and the Arts: a Leading family in Sicily and the West Riding (PDF) (D. Phil thesis). University of York. p. xv. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ^ Web, Kanga. "James Kitson" (PDF). History of Kitson family. Kangaweb Pty Ltd. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
- ^ "Premier in Leeds...Premier and Mrs. Asquith leave Leeds". Leeds Mercury. 27–29 November 1913. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
- ^ Lloyd George, David (1973). The Lloyd George Liberal Magazine 1920–1923, Volume 1, Issues 1–6. Great Britain: Harvester Press (re-print). pp. 246–385. ISBN 9780855274320. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- ^ "Edith Cliff, Commandant of Gledhow Hall Military Hospital". Leodis. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
- ^ "Gledhow Hall, West Yorkshire: Romance in a War Hospital". BBC. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
- ^ "The Gledhow Hall scrapbook". Leeds Libraries. 25 July 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- ^ "Historypin". Historypin. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
- ^ Campbell, Gordon (2006). The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts. Oxford University Press. p. 162.