History UK logo collage
History UK navigation bar
History UK Homepage
History Timeline
News about history in the UK
About Us
History UK Site Map
History Web Links
History UK navigation bar

Bookmark History.uk.com

Tell your friends about History.uk.com
Free History Newsletter
ITN Archive
Historic Recipes
Useful Resources for Historian
Information Britain
UK Web Archive Consortium
The 1940s
British History on eBay




Quicksearch History.uk.com

  

For best results, click here for Advanced Search

 
yellow line
History UK Premium listing

Stokesay Castle

Craven Arms
Shropshire
SY7 9AH

Click here for a map showing where this organisation is located.

01588 672544

http://www.castlegate.net/CASTLES/Stokesay/

Reference No:   20904

yellow line

Stokesay Castle

Stokesay Castle

Following the Norman conquest, the settlement, originally known as 'Stoke', which means 'Dairy farm', became the propety of the de Say family, from whom Stokesay takes its name. It remained their home until about 1240.

Although the lower two storey's in the North tower survive from this early era, Stokesay as it stands now is largely the work of Lawrence de Ludlow, who owned it between 1281 and 1296.

It is said that Lawrence bought the land for the price of a 'juvenile sparrow hawk'.

Lawrence was a self-made, wealthy wool merchant, who was so rich it was said he lent money to the King and Marcher Lords. He was granted a licence from King Edward I to fortify his house at Stokesay and he set about turning the castle into a fine country residence.

It was Lawrence who built the Great Hall, comfortable living quarters, south tower and the crenulated curtain protective wall. The result was a large elegant residence, surrounded by a water-filled moat, now dry, but that was originally fed from a nearby pool.

Sadly, Lawrence, drowned in a shipwreck in 1294, but his decendants inhabited Stokesay for the next 300 years until 1497.

In 1598 Stokesay was sold to pay debts, passing through the hands of several owners including the Craven family, until it was let to Charles Baldwyn who in the 1630's was MP for Ludlow.

It is Baldwyn who is credited with building the timber-framed Jacobean gatehouse on the site of a medieval predecessor. The gatehouse remains today and acts as an entrance to the courtyard.

The English Civil War 1642-46

During the civil war many of Shropshire's castle's were destroyed. It was 1645 when Shrewsbury had fallen to the Parliamentarians and an army was sent to seize Ludlow Castle that stokesay was first threatened.

On their way, troops came accrss Stokesay, which was garrisoned by the royalists but surrendered to Cromwellian troops in 1645.

Following this siege, Stokesay was ordered to be 'slighted' or flattened. Whilst many other Shropshire Castles including Bishops Castle and Bridgnorth did disappear as a result, their stones plundered and used elsewhere, Stokesay escaped this fate, and by 1647 only the curtain wall had been demolished.

These events during the civil war are the only recored military encounters at Stokesay, however the castle, of course, managed to survive.

The nearby church of St. John the Baptist however, suffured extensive damage during a battle in the following year. Consequently, the church was virtually rebuilt in 1654. This makes the church important as it is one of the few churches built in England during the Commonwealth period. Inside, the church has elegant canopied pews where the gentry would have sat and box pews for the humber folk. There are also texts carved and painted on the walls.

In the meantime, Stokesay has passed to Charles Baldwyns son, Sir Samuel Baldwyn, who in turn, passed Stokesay to his son Charles, who died in 1706.

Sadly 150 years of neglect followed, which meant that Stokesay did come close to destruction, its buildings used by a nearby farm. However Stokesay was bought in 1869 by a Victorian visionery, named JD Allcroft.

Allcroft began restoring the historic Stokesay to its former glory, however, during the Victorian era, many historic houses were restored by their well meaning owners, which normally resulted in them removing key original features in favour of the owners personal tastes.

Fortunately this did not happen to Stokesay, which Allcroft effectively saved from ruin. Allcroft finally died in 1893, passing the Castle to his son who carried on the work, before finally opening to the public in 1908 for the first time.

The castle was passed to English Heritage in 1992 who still manage and maintain the site.

Stokesay's superb condition today is largly due to the care of its successive owners and the fact that it only changed hands five times in 700 years.

However, Stokesay is not really a castle, it never was, it is a fortified manor house, built to impress but withstand potential land battles with the welsh.

However, its apearance, it can be deceptive, the south tower looking very fortress-like with buttressed walls and battlements. The north tower however, is solely domestic with its timber framed upper storey.

Stokesay castle is located seven miles north west of Ludlow, off the A49.

 

Home / About / Contact us / Get a Free Premium Listing / Teachers / Disclaimer






Ancestors Magazine from the Na
Best of British Magazine
Barefoot Leather of Ludlow
Skidmore's
Barefoot Leather Shropshire
Office Space Finders
Office Broker
National Archives Domesday
UKTV History
London Offices
Past Perfect Music
British Museum
Web design and hosting