Look Inside… Florence Nightingale’s Childhood Home
By
6 months ago
A country home like no other
Looking for a home with a bit of history? This idyllic country pile is where Florence Nightingale spent her childhood. Take a look inside Lea Hurst.
Lea Hurst, Derbyshire: Florence Nightingale’s Childhood Home Is Up For Sale
While this Grade II listed, thirteen-bedroom property certainly looks spectacular, it also boasts a fascinating story: it served as the childhood home of Florence Nightingale. Her father, William Shore, inherited the estate from his uncle in 1815, eventually adapting and extending the existing farmhouse to create the grand Elizabethan-style house we see today.
Lea Hurst’s wonderful history doesn’t stop there, however: it was occupied by renowned novelist and biographer Elizabeth Gaskell in 1854 while she wrote her novel North and South, and the estate itself remained in the possession of the Nightingale family right up until 1951, when it became a home for retired nurses. It was subsequently purchased by the Royal Surgical Society before being turned back into a private house by the current owners in 2011l. They spent three years painstakingly restoring it, with the help of local craftsmen.
Perched on a hillside overlooking the Derwent Valley, the property sits within more than 19 acres of lush grounds which feature a walled garden, separate formal garden, and a picture-perfect pergola walkway draped with roses and clematis. You’ll also find outbuildings including a stone workshop, four-car garage and a charming summerhouse, which is tucked away behind a terraced dining area bordered by ornamental trees.
Inside the house itself there’s plenty to explore: alongside the thirteen bedrooms, you can expect eight bathrooms and an array of reception rooms including a dining room, sitting room, games room and playroom, plus a drawing room and a library (where Florence Nightingale was homeschooled by her father).
The kitchen is complete with limestone floors, granite countertops and a dual-aspect breakfast area, with a separate sitting area leading onto a pretty outdoor terrace. Upstairs, meanwhile, you’ll spot the principal suite (which encompasses a dressing room and bathroom), a charming double bedroom and study (used by Nightingale herself after she returned from Crimea) and the remaining bedrooms, alongside two family bathrooms.
Spectacular, spacious and brimming with history, Lea Hurst really is one of a kind. Want to make it yours? It’s on the market for £3.75 million…
Available through Blue Book Agency. bluebookagency.com