Ayscoughfee Hall is a unique survivor of a family house from the mid-15th century.
Ayscoughfee Hall dates from the mid-15th century and is a Grade I listed building. Only 2.5% of listed buildings in England hold this status, which reflects the significance and importance of Ayscoughfee Hall to British history.
Dendrochronological or tree-ring dating on some of the original roof timbers have been dated to around 1450, making the Hall over 550 years old.
What makes Ayscoughfee Hall particularly unique is that it was primarily a family home from 1451 to 1902.
Throughout the centuries the Hall changed, with each owner adapting the building to accommodate their needs and to reflect the fashions of the time. This is seen by the Gothic inspired Victorian frontage, the Georgian Adam style ceiling in the galleried Entrance Hall, and the many exposed Medieval features throughout the Hall.
The prominent Johnson family were the longest owners, resident from 1658 to 1864. Afterwards it was home for a succession of tenant families, before being purchased by the people of Spalding in the early 20th Century. Since then, it has housed Belgian WW1 refugees, been a library, a school and Council Offices. Today, it is the District’s museum.
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