Wallington Hall
Wallington Hall is a Grade I listed country house and estate located near Cambo in Northumberland, England, originally incorporating a medieval pele tower and hall house that was rebuilt in the late 17th century by Sir William Blackett.[1][2]
The estate, spanning approximately 13,500 acres of parkland, gardens, and woodland, was acquired by the Blackett family in 1689 and later passed to the Trevelyan family in 1777, who enhanced its interiors, including the commissioning of pre-Raphaelite-style murals in the central hall by artist William Bell Scott in the 1850s.[3][4][5]
Architecturally, the house exemplifies William and Mary style with later Palladian modifications by Daniel Garrett between 1738 and 1746, featuring a roofed-over courtyard and ornate decorations depicting Northumbrian history.[6][7]
In 1942, Sir Charles Philips Trevelyan donated the property to the National Trust, marking it as one of the organization's earliest large-scale acquisitions and preserving its historical significance for public access.[8][9]