Monument record 2060/3 - Poynton Park

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Summary

In 1758 Sir George Warren married a rich heiress, which enabled him to improve his estate and landscape the park. He made a dam to create a pool of 22 acres in front of his newly built house and trebled the size of the park enclosure. In 1758 Poynton Pool was created, an avenue of lime trees from the pool to the hall. The park was landscaped and a carriageway was established from Lyme Hall to Poynton Hall and Bramhall Hall. The hall had large ornamental and kitchen gardens and a round garden pool which is all that remains in a housing estate. There has been much replanting within the park, which still has fine beech and oak parkland trees and the north and south lodges still remain.

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

<1> de Figueiredo P & Treuherz J, 1988, Cheshire Country Houses, p.264 (Book). SCH785.

In 1758 Sir George Warren married a rich heiress, which enabled him to improve his estate, landscape the park and build a new hall (RN:2060/2) to the NW of the original site (RN:2060/1/1). He made a dam to create pool of 22 acres in front of the house & trebled the size of the park enclosure

<2> Laurie I C, 1986, Parks & Gardens of the Cheshire Peaks & Plains, no.11 (Book). SCH2589.

In 1758 Poynton Pool was created, an avenue of lime being planted from the pool- side to the hall. The park was landscaped and a carriageway was established from Lyme Hall to Poynton Hall and Bramhall Hall. The hall had large ornamental and kitchen gardens an a round garden pool which is all that remains in a housing estate. There has been much replanting within the park, which still has fine beech & oak parkland trees & the N & S lodges still remain

<3> Cheshire Gardens Trust, 2011 onwards, Research and Recording Report, Poynton Park, 2024 (Report). SCH6655.

Poynton Park is the remnant of a much larger park which lay within a large estate owned by the Warren and then the Vernon families who benefited from the discovery of coal and the development of mining in the area, together with improvements in transport and proximity to local markets.
The original timber framed 16th century Hall, later named Poynton Towers, was located in the southern parkland together with an extensive walled garden and pool, Kings Pool. It was succeeded by an 18th century Hall, Poynton Hall, situated overlooking the lake. Both Halls are recorded in paintings, etchings and estate plans; neither survives, Poynton Towers having been much altered was finally demolished in the 1940s, and Poynton Hall was demolished c1860s.
Key elements of the 18th century designed landscape remain including the lake and associated trees, together with the King’s Pool, South Lodge and the Ice house which all lie outside the boundary of the public park. A palimpsest of the earlier formal landscape remains in the ancient Limes of the lime avenue.
The Park and Pool, 21 hectares, are managed by Cheshire East, and included as non-designated heritage assets in the Poynton Neighbourhood Plan.

Principal remaining features
Poynton Pool – pre 1750, 22 acres in extent, dammed by an earth embankment planted with trees forming the western boundary of the historic park. The 1767 Staffordshire to Stockport turnpike, now the A523, was constucted parallel to the dam. The estimated capacity of the pool is 130,000m3 which means that it is subject to the Reservoirs Act 1975. The pool is idenfied as a non-designated heitage asset in the Poynton Neighbourhood Plan, and in Cheshire East Local Plan as a Site of Biological Importance / Local Wildlife Site.
Kings Pool – pre 1770, with a central island, probably created at the same time as the adjacent walled garden of Poynton Towers, no longer extant. The pool now lies within a private gated housing development south of the remaining park.
South Lodge - Grade II, 50 London Road North, List Entry Number:1277165
Early 19th century
Icehouse – Grade II, Towers Road, List Number: 1277105
Circa 1758 with C19 ante-chamber
Boathouse – 19th century brick boathouse, locally listed.

Parkland trees – including veteran Lime trees over 250 years old, remnants of a lime avenue planted in relation to Poynton Towers; Beech and other trees on the dam over 200 years old.

Sources/Archives (3)

  • <1> Book: de Figueiredo P & Treuherz J. 1988. Cheshire Country Houses. p.264.
  • <2> Book: Laurie I C. 1986. Parks & Gardens of the Cheshire Peaks & Plains. no.11.
  • <3> Report: Cheshire Gardens Trust. 2011 onwards. Research and Recording Report. R3490. Poynton Park, 2024.

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Related Events/Activities (1)

External Links (0)

Location

Grid reference Centred SJ 924 843 (741m by 939m) Central Point
Map sheet SJ98SW
Civil Parish POYNTON-WITH-WORTH, MACCLESFIELD, CHESHIRE EAST
Historic Township/Parish/County POYNTON, PRESTBURY, CHESHIRE

Protected Status/Designation

Record last edited

Jan 15 2025 11:13AM