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Just two families in 120 years
This glorious grade II listed Italianate country house was built as a family
home towards the end of the nineteenth century for John Entwisle, the High
Sheriff of Leicestershire. After the death of Mr Entwisle's second wife in
the 1960s, the house passed to the Snowdon family who lived here till the present
owners bought it in 1999.
The son of public servants
John Bertie Norreys Entwisle had public service in his blood.
He was an only son, born in 1856 at Foxholes near Rochdale
to a family in which his father, grandfather and great-grandfather
had all been High Sheriffs of Lancashire. His grandfather was
also MP for Rochdale. The family made their money through the
Lancashire woollen mills.
John Entwisle subsequently moved to the Midlands where he became
a successful local businessman. Census records for 1881 show
him living as a bachelor in North Kilworth with a household retinue
of nine. It was in that year that he married Sophia Dalton, niece
of Baron Lisgar,
the second Governor General of Canada.

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A building fit for
a High Sheriff
In 1888, aged just 32, John Entwisle became High Sheriff of Leicestershire.
He must have felt the need for a home to match his status; in that same
year he commissioned a Mr A E Purdie to design Kilworth House.
The entire
project took two to three years. Accounts reveal that the cumulative
costs of developing the building and grounds amounted to £39,000. |
By 1890, Mr and Mrs Entwisle were firmly established in their
new home. Mrs Entwisle's own meticulous records show that she
retained five maidservants, one of whom – the second housemaid – earned
just £22 a year. This was the era of grand entertaining
at Kilworth House, when the cream of Leicestershire's Victorian
society came to dine with the High Sheriff and his wife.
Promise unfulfilled
Sophia Entwisle died childless in 1916. Three years later, John
Entwisle married again – to Florence, third daughter
of Sir Alex E Ramsay. But she too remained childless.
So John Entwisle passed away in 1945 without issue, and the
house and his entire estate passed to his second wife, valued
at just over £210,000.
A new lease of family life
When Florence died during the 1960s, the Snowdon family bought
Kilworth House. At last, almost a century after it was built,
the house and grounds rang with the laughter and carefree joy
of family life that John Entwisle had hoped for.
During the late 1970s, rock culture briefly touched on Kilworth
House when Tony Iommi, the Black Sabbath guitarist, lived here
while dating one of the Snowdon daughters.
The architect's vision restored
In 1999, the Snowdons sold Kilworth House to the current owners
who began a meticulous project of restoration and redevelopment.
Their vision was to secure the future of Kilworth House and
its grounds, and transform it into a beautiful hotel that would
delight visitors for many years to come.
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