
One of the finest examples of an English stately home
At the time of the Norman Survey, Stapleford was held under the King by Henry de Ferrers, who fought at the battle of Hastings in
1066, and who was afterwards appointed the Doomsday Commissioner. After passing through a succession of owners, in the 14th Century Stapleford formed part of the great estates of John O'Gaunt, and in
1336 the manor was settled as part of the dowry of Blanche, his wife.
In
1402 the house was acquired from the Earl of Lancaster by Robert Sherard, a descendant of William the Conqueror, and for the next 484 years Stapleford remained in the possession of his family.
The Old Wing was restored in
1633 by William Sherard, but his wife Abigail was said to have had a greater part in the restoration of this section.
A change of ownership came in
1894 when the house was purchased by Lord Gretton, a wealthy brewer of the firm Bass, Ratcliffe and Gretton.
Lord Gretton is said to have wanted to establish his place in society and bought Stapleford not so much for its land but its connection with hunting and Melton Mowbray. Stapleford would assist in introducing him to the fashionable hunting circles.
He radically changed the house, adding on a series of reception rooms and further bedrooms.
The house finally represented the magnificence of English architecture through the ages and allowed the entertaining of house guests on a grand scale as was common in the Edwardian era. Today Stapleford is regarded by many as one of the finest and most beautiful examples of an English stately home.