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29 October 2014
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LOCAL HISTORY

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Restoration
July 2004
Sheffield Manor story
By Clare Dykes, project manager at Sheffield Manor Lodge
Clare Dykes on the roof of Sheffield Manor Lodge
Clare Dykes on the roof of Sheffield Manor Lodge
Manor Lodge is the most important historic site in Sheffield, since the destruction of Sheffield Castle...
SEE ALSO



Lodge photo gallery


Manor Lodge movie

Story of the Lodge

The plan to restore the Lodge



Restoration 2004?

Restoration 2003

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GREEN ESTATE LTD

The Manor Lodge Project Manager is employed by the Green Estate Ltd which is a joint venture between Manor and Castle Development Trust and Sheffield Wildlife Trust.

The Green Estate is a social enterprise that manages the green spaces in the Manor and Castle wards of Sheffield for the benefit of local people. The Green Estate's offices are located at Manor Lodge.

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Built in the 16th century, the Lodge is a scheduled ancient monument and boasts three listed buildings, but, despite this, is little known by the majority of Sheffield's population.

Mary Queen of Scots to the Industrial Revolution

Detail from the Lodge's ceiling
Detail from the Lodge's ceiling
Manor Lodge and the characters associated with it have played leading roles not only in Sheffield life, but also on the national stage.

Fourteen of the years Mary Queen of Scots spent in captivity plotting to take her cousin Queen Elizabeth's place were spent in Sheffield, and a good deal of that time at the Lodge.

That same period of Sheffield Park's history saw the beginnings of industrialisation under the hand of Mary's jailor, the Earl of Shrewsbury.

Two centuries later, the Shrewsbury family successors, the Norfolks, were employing one of the country's leading mining engineers, John Curr, to spearhead another step change in mining development and this was to lead to the invention of the railway track.

Manor Lodge was key to Sheffield's development in many ways, linked with the industrialisation of the cutlery industry through the manorial lords, the exploitation of the open countryside for its raw materials and the mechanisation of the mining industry which was to revolutionise the means of production and put Sheffield in front of its rivals for most of the 19th century.

Decline of the Lodge
However, after the estate passed to the Duke of Norfolk in the early 17th century Manor Lodge itself began a steady decline. Much of the lodge building was dismantled in the early 18th century as parkland was discarded in favour of the Norfolk's farming and mining interests.

Ruins on the site of Sheffield Manor Lodge
Ruins on the site of Sheffield Manor Lodge

Manor Oaks and Manor Cottage Farms were constructed adjacent to the Lodge - perhaps constructed from reclaimed stone from the lodge. A mine was sunk immediately behind the Lodge and a mining and farming community sprang up inside and adjacent to the ruins. The Turret House (otherwise known as Manor Lodge) became an elegant farmhouse.

Handed to the City
In 1953 The Norfolk estate granted a 999 year lease of the site to the City of Sheffield.
Archaeological digs were carried out by the City Museum over the 60s and 70s to uncover more of the sites history.

However, a lack of funding eventually meant that it was no longer possible to open the Turret House as a museum and the site remained closed to the general public for a number of years.

Where we are now
In 1995 the Friends of Manor 'Castle' group was formed. (Manor Lodge is known affectionately as the 'castle' to residents on the Manor.)

View from the roof of Sheffield Manor Lodge
View from the roof of Sheffield Manor Lodge

The group aimed to generate support for restoration work, to develop visitor facilities and manage activities on the site. In 2001 Sheffield Wildlife Trust and Manor and Castle Development Trust (MCDT) joined forces with the Friends of Manor 'Castle' to promote a whole site project incorporating Manor Lodge and the two adjacent farms, Manor Oaks and Manor Cottages, creating a total area of 14 hectares.

In 2003 the Manor Lodge Project Manager was employed to take forward this project and the two farms adjoining the Lodge were purchased by MCDT.

Now energies are focussed on obtaining funding from a range of sources to restore and regenerate the site.

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