• By April 1926 Wythenshawe Hall and 250 acres (1 km2) of its surrounding estate had been sold to Ernest Simon, 1st Baron Simon of Wythenshawe and Shena...
  • Wythenshawe Hall and its surrounding parkland were donated to Manchester Corporation in 1926, and in 1930 it was opened to the public as a museum.
  • Wythenshawe Hall hasn't been open to the public since March 2016 when it was partly destroyed by an arson attack.
  • In 2021 Wythenshawe Hall was awarded the RIBA North West Conservation Award for its remarkable restoration following a devastating arson attack in 2016.
  • The Tatton family had a deer park in Wythenshawe, then Cheshire, as far back as 1297. However, the present Hall dates to about 1540 when Robert Tatton was...
  • And although Wythenshawe Hall likes to keep their ghosts out of the public eye, all the repairs appear to have awakened long dormant ghostly activity.
  • The Grade II-listed 16th Century Wythenshawe Hall had been the victim of an arson attack, leaving the upper floor and roof completely destroyed.
  • Wythenshawe Hall was badly damaged by an arson attack in March of 2016. Repairs and restoration, which cost £6.7 million, took six years to complete...
  • Wythenshawe Hall is a 16th Century Tudor house in Wythenshawe, in Manchester, England. Altrincham is to the west, Stockport to the east, and Manchester...
  • Wythenshawe Hall, dating from 1540, was the home of the Tatton family for more than 600 years, and is now owned by Manchester City Council.