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Seighford Pool
Seighford Pool in the grounds of Seighford Hall. Seighford Hall is an Elizabethan house to which additions were made over the years, particularly during the Victorian period.
A brick tower in the grounds ...
Seighford Vicarage
A postcard view of the Vicarage and on the right a glimpse of St. Chad’s Church tower in Seighford. In later years the Vicarage was demolished and the area redeveloped with private housing.
St. Chad's ...
Sharpcliffe Hall, Ipstones
Sharpcliffe Hall was built by John Whitehall in 1673 and later restored by D.H. Sneyd in the 1860s. In about 1907 the house was again restored and was enlarged. This view shows the later wing and the ...
Sharpcliffe Rocks, Ipstones
Sharpcliffe Rocks, which lie in the grounds of Sharpcliffe Hall, near Ipstones. Sharpcliffe Hall was built by John Whitehall in 1673 and later restored by D.H. Sneyd in the 1860s. In about 1907 the house ...
Shelton Old Hall
Shelton Old Hall was situated off Wellesley Street and was the birthplace of the poet Elijah Fenton in 1683. The Hall was destroyed by fire on 22 May 1853.
A pen and watercolour drawing by an unknown ...
Shenstone Lodge, Shenstone
This postcard view shows the east front of Shenstone Lodge. In later years the building was modified and became part of Shenstone Lodge School. It was built in the early 18th century and has been the ...
Shenstone's Chapel from west
The chapel lies in Priests Wood on the Enville estate. It is dedicated to, and was probably designed by William Shenstone, poet and landscape gardener. It was built in about 1750-60.
Reproduced by ...
Shenstone's Chapel, Enville Hall
The Enville Hall estate was landscaped between 1745 and 1755 by the 4th Earl of Stamford, using the services of the poet and landscape designer William Shenstone of Halesowen, and Sanderson Miller, a ...
Shepherd's Monument, Shugborough Park,
The Shepherd's Monument (c.1750) takes its name from its central marble relief by the Dutch artist Peter Scheemakers, who also worked on Shugborough's Triumphal Arch.
The relief is a mirror image of ...
Shire Hall and Market Square, Stafford,
Stafford had held a weekly market since the Middle Ages. In 1853 a covered market opened behind the new Guildhall, but some stalls continued to trade from the Market Square.
On the right is the Shire ...
Shire Hall, Stafford,
There has been a shire building in Stafford since the 1280s, used as a meeting place for the County Court and later for other civic meetings.
The present building, designed by John Harvey and erected ...
Shooting Party at Ranton Abbey
Thomas William Anson, 1st Earl of Lichfield (1795-1854) is mounted on a pony, with Lord Melbourne on his right and Lord Uxbridge behind him, wearing a grey hat. Lord Sefton is seated at the left and ...
Shot Tower, Alton Towers
The Shot Tower stands on the north-east corner of the curtain wall, built in 1842 and designed by A.W.N. Pugin. The road through the archway leads to the Grand Entrance to Alton Towers.
This postcard ...
Shrewsbury Arms, Stafford,
The white building on the corner of Pitcher Bank is the Shrewsbury Arms.
Shrewsbury Lodge, Weston Park
Weston Hall was built by Sir Thomas and Lady Wilbraham in 1671. Lady Wilbraham was believed to have been the architect but recent research indicates that William Taylor carried out the designs. In 1762 ...
Shugborough - 'Athenian' Architecture: water colour painting
'Tixall [in pencil] from Shugborough.' Showing a general view with the Orangery on the right, mock ruins in the centre, and Tixall Hall and stabling behind, beyond the River Sow. Anonymous, [S. Shaw.]...
Shugborough - Cat Monument: sepia drawing
'The Cat Monument in the Garden at Shugborough, Staffordshire,' showing a cat on top of an urn resting on a square solid base on steps. There is a carved relief let into the side.'J. B.,' [John Buckler.]...