Gledstone Hall is a 20th-century country house in West Marton, near Skipton, North Yorkshire, England. Designed by Edwin Lutyens it stands in a 12ha estate.[1] It is a Grade II* listed building. The gardens are separately listed Grade II.
Gledstone House was a previous house (now demolished) which stood on the site and was built for Richard Roundell,[2] probably by John Carr of York. Roundell died before it could be completed and was succeeded by his brother, the Revd William Roundell,[3] a Deputy Lieutenant and J.P. His son, Richard Henry Roundell, inherited and was High Sheriff of Yorkshire for 1835–36.[4] The estate descended in the Roundell family until Richard Roundell sold it, with of estate, to Lancashire mill-owner Sir Amos Nelson in 1923.
The existing building was designed for Sir Amos Nelson by Edwin Lutyens and built between 1925 and 1927.[5] The previous house was demolished in 1928. The gardens were laid out c.1930 by Gertrude Jekyll.[6] Sir Amos died in 1947 and his young wife in 1966. It was converted into a nursing home for some time (but which failed in 1991) and was bought by Margaret Francis, the widow of artist Sam Francis. She has commissioned a total refurbishment of the building.[7]