The house was built about 1733 by Wredenhall Pearce, who had inherited the estate in 1731.
The new house, designed by William Smith Jr. of Warwick, of three storeys and with a twelve-bay frontage carrying a balustraded parapet, boasts an unusual circular entrance hall with Ionic columns and a honeysuckle frieze.[1][2]
Sir Charles Henry Rouse-Boughton was resident in 1881 with his family and nine domestic servants.[4] Following the death of the last Baronet in 1963 his daughter Miss MF Rouse-Boughton continued to live at the Hall.[5]