- Birchley Hall
Infobox Historic building
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name=Birchley Hall
location_town=Billinge
location_country=ENG
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style=Birchley Hall is a grade II* listed
Elizabethan house built in about 1594, in Billinge,Merseyside ,England . It is situated inpostcode WN5 7QL.Birchley Hall was bought by Christopher Anderton of Lostock in about 1581. The present building was built by one son, James and extended by another son, Thurston in 1594. There is an inscription stone carved with 'TA 1594' on the front of the house, TA being attributed to Thurston. Thurston died in 1598 or 1599 and another brother, Christopher, lived at the Hall with his wife Anne Scarisbrick till 1613, when James died, and he inherited Lostock Hall. Another brother, Roger, lived at Birchley Hall till his death in 1640.
The Birchley Hall Press
Birchley Hall, at this time, was in the county of
Lancashire , which was a stronghold forRoman Catholic s during their persecution during the reigns ofHenry VIII , who destroyed and plundered many monasteries (much of their riches were given toOxford University colleges), andQueen Elizabeth I . Catholics, especially priests, were driven underground and catholic literature was vigorously suppressed.A secret Catholic
printing press was set up at Birchley Hall, possibly in about 1604, by Thurstan, whose wife Norris ofSpeke was a Catholic, orrecusant as they were known then. Roger Anderton more certainly ran a printing press from about 1613. About 19 titles are attributed to the Birchley Hall Press by theEnglish Short Title Catalogue of theBritish Library .Many of the books are in the name of John Brerely, which is thought to be a pseudonym of Lawrence Anderton, a cousin of James and his brothers. He was the youngest son of Lawrence Anderton of
Chorley , was educated at Blackburn Grammar School, and entered Christ's College,Cambridge University in 1593. He is thought to have originally taken orders in theAnglican Church but went toRome in 1604 and subsequently joined theSociety of Jesus . He published a volume of poems in 1601 in London and The Protestant Apologie in 1604, which may be his first book after becoming a Catholic priest.The Birchley Hall chapel
One wing of the Hall contains a
chapel which was used for secret religious services. According to "Secret Hiding Places" published in 1933, there was a trap door in thevestry floor concealed inside aconfessional box. This led to the floor below and into the Hall and would have been used for priest to escape discovery. In 1920 a fall of plaster disclosed a secret door to a short tunnel in the wall leading to a look-out in the roof, from which the approach to the house could be watched. It was in poor condition at the time. Hiding places were also discovered (date unknown). In one of these chalices andvestment s were found, which were subsequently kept at the local catholic church. A chalice, however, was stolen from the church in the 1970s. There are also reports of books being found under the floor during a restoration in the 1920s, including an early edition of Ptolemy's "Geography". It is not known what happened to these.Birchley Hall was bought by Vincent Wood from his cousin Joseph Middlehurst in 1945. His son Bernard partially restored the chapel up to the 1970s, when the Hall was sold to the charity
Sue Ryder Care , which converted it into a home for the elderly. The chapel was fully restored for interdenominational use, and as of 2008 the Foundation still runs the Hall as a care centre for the elderly. [cite web|url=http://www.sueryder.com/birchleyhall/|title=Care Centre Details|accessdate=2007-08-12|format=HTML]References
Bibliography
cite book
last=Hawkes
first=Arthur J
title=The Birchley Hall Secret Press
year=1926
publisher=Reprinted by the Oxford University Press from the transactions of the Bibliographical Society
location=Londoncite book
last=Squiers
first=Granville
title=Secret Hiding Places: The origins, histories and descriptions of English secret hiding-places, used by priests, cavaliers, Jacobites and smugglers
year=1933
publisher=Stanley Paul & Co Ltd.
location=LondonExternal links
* [http://www.sueryder.com/birchleyhall/ http://www.sueryder.com/birchleyhall/] - Sue Ryder Care page about its Birchley Hall facility
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