Gainsborough Old Hall


Gainsborough Old Hall.

Gainsborough Old Hall in Lincolnshire is among the best preserved Tudor manor houses in the country; it now reopens to the public after a major revamp. Visitors are invited to learn about the property’s long and varied history – as host to wealth and power in its early years (Henry VIII and John Wesley each passed through its doors), and later as a theatre, masonic temple, pub and soup kitchen. The hall’s kitchen is recognised as one of the largest and most complete kitchens of its time to survive in England – and for the opening weekend only (3–4 July), a selection of ‘Tudor picnic boxes’ will be served in the new cafe. Other highlights include a series of 15 newly conserved portraits of the Hickmans, a Puritan family who acquired the hall in 1596. Find out more from English Heritage’s website.

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The Great Hall at Gainsborough Old Hall. Photo: Christopher Ison; courtesy Immediate Media and English Heritage

The Great Hall at Gainsborough Old Hall.

The medieval kitchen at Gainsborough Old Hall. Photo: Christopher Ison; courtesy Immediate Media and English Heritage

The medieval kitchen at Gainsborough Old Hall.

The Royal Picnic Box, served at Gainsborough Old Hall

The Royal Picnic Box, served at Gainsborough Old Hall