Guns And Roses
Country Life UK|October 2, 2019
Two sporting estates are the flowers of their counties–one in the family of a Gunpowder Plotter, the other at the heart of malt-whisky land.
Penny Churchill
Guns And Roses
IN a year that has seen few genuine sporting estates emerging onto the open market, the sale, for the first time in more than 80 years, of the historic 540-acre Ireton Wood Hall estate at Idridgehay, near Belper, Derbyshire, is an event to be savoured by the field sports community at large.

Selling agent Edward Caudwell of Caudwell & Co (01629 810018), who quotes a guide price of £8 million for the picturesque estate with its fine, Grade II-listed Hall, paints an enticing picture: ‘It’s extremely rare for an estate such as this to come to the market in Derbyshire —rarer still to find one located two fields to the south of the southern boundary of the Chatsworth estate between Matlock and Ashbourne, with three other well-known shoots in the near vicinity. In fact, in the past 20 years, I can recall only three estates sold in the county with more than 500 acres.

‘With its magnificent topography of rolling hills and good woodland cover,’ he continues, ‘the Ireton Wood Hall estate offers great potential for someone to re-create what was a lovely little shoot, with fishing on the River Ecclesbourne that runs through the grounds —amenities that persuaded the owner’s late father to buy the estate back in 1937.’

Imposing Ireton Wood Hall is set close to the heart of the land, surrounded by sweeping lawned gardens with a ha-ha overlooking parkland; the rest of the estate is a mix of grazing and woodland, the former subject to various tenancy agreements. The forerunner to the present house dates from 1630, when it was the seat of Thomas Catesby, whose forbear, Robert, was a leading conspirator in the Gunpowder Plot. Thomas’s widow, Elizabeth, was still living there in 1670, seven years after her husband’s death. In the 18th century, the house was let to the Alsops, the last of whom to live there was Robert Alsop in 1829.

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