History in Structure

Woodhouse Hall

A Grade II Listed Building in Hyde Park and Woodhouse, Leeds

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.8029 / 53°48'10"N

Longitude: -1.557 / 1°33'25"W

OS Eastings: 429274

OS Northings: 434153

OS Grid: SE292341

Mapcode National: GBR BGJ.4K

Mapcode Global: WHC9D.1PV0

Plus Code: 9C5WRC3V+46

Entry Name: Woodhouse Hall

Listing Date: 8 May 1973

Last Amended: 11 September 1996

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1375011

English Heritage Legacy ID: 465891

Also known as: Little Woodhouse Hall

ID on this website: 101375011

Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2

County: Leeds

Electoral Ward/Division: Hyde Park and Woodhouse

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Leeds

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Leeds St George

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Tagged with: House

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Description



LEEDS

SE2934SW HYDE TERRACE
714-1/73/214 (South West side)
08/05/73 Nos.1-5 (Consecutive)
Woodhouse Hall
(Formerly Listed as:
HYDE TERRACE
(South West side)
Nos.1-5 (Consecutive))
(Formerly Listed as:
CLARENDON ROAD
(North East side)
No.18)

GV II

Formerly known as: Little Woodhouse Hall.
House, subsequently judges' lodgings and art school, now
hospital staff residence. c1740, altered c1840. restored
c1980. For Christopher Thompson. Later C18 alterations;
additions and alterations c1840 probably by John Clark,
interior alterations and decoration 1847 by William Reid
Corson and Edward la Trobe Bateman to designs by Owen Jones,
possibly for the heirs of John Atkinson; restored c1980. Red
brick, stone dressings, slate roof.
2 and 3 storeys over basement, 5-bay entrance facade east,
8-bay garden front faces S. East front: quoins; steps up to
6-panel door, bay 4, with overlight in architrave, pillared
porch with entablature, cornice and pierced parapet forming
balcony to the window above in architrave with cornice;
remaining windows in architraves, first-floor sill band, C20
frames throughout; modillion eaves cornice, hipped roof with
stack rear left.
Left return, S garden front composed of: 3-storey, 4-bay plain
facade with single and paired windows in stone architraves,
C20 stair window left; flanking shallow projecting 2-storey
canted bays, plain architraves left, corniced architraves
right; added 2-storey 1 x 5-bay wing right, quoins, corniced
architraves.
INTERIOR: main door opens into corridor leading into circular
domed staircase hall, all paved with mosaic in blues, browns
and yellow in a geometric pattern with 8-pointed star,
concentric circles and panels with Greek motifs; staircase
with cast-iron panels of scrolls and flowers to balustrade,
ramped handrail. At the west end of the house the plaster
decoration and round-arched niche of the C18 staircase hall
survives, stairs rebuilt.


HISTORICAL NOTE: the plain 3-storey range facing S was the
manor house of the hamlet of Little Woodhouse, rebuilt by
Christopher Thompson, gentleman; 'a new house empty' in 1740
and available for letting with 8 or 18 acres of land in 1741.
In 1793 the distiller Thomas Coupland bought it; he went
bankrupt in 1822 and the hall was sold to John Atkinson, a
leading solicitor in the town, who died 1833. Alterations to
the Hall were supervised by John Clark for Atkinson's
co-heirs, his 2 sons, who lived at Waverley House, Woodhouse
Square (qv) from 1840.
Corson and Bateman were pupils of Owen Jones, the leading
authority on polychromy in architecture and a friend of Joseph
Bonomi who in 1838-40 was designing the Temple Mills, Marshall
Street (qv). Six lunettes painted for the staircase hall by
John Everett Millais are in the collection of Leeds City Art
Gallery. In 1855 William Hey, surgeon, sold the Hall to the
city for a Judges' Lodging, moving to No.20 Clarendon Road
(qv). The Hall later became a part of the Art College and by
1973 was divided into 6 apartments; it is now the property of
Leeds Hospital Authority.
(Beresford, M: Walks Round Red Brick: Leeds University Press:
1980-: 81, 82; Beresford, M: East End, West End: the Face of
Leeds During Urbanisation 1684-1: Leeds: 1988-: 327; Linstrum,
D: West Yorkshire Architects and Architecture: London: 1978-:
106, 107).



Listing NGR: SE2927434153

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