Moseley Old Hall
Moseley Old Hall, Fordhouses, Wolverhampton,
WV10 7HY
Occasionally you hit on the perfect tour guide
and at Moseley it was Malcolm. Now I'm sure the others would have been
just as interesting but Malcolm kept me enthralled in the house with
stories of the escape of King Charles the Second (to be) after the Battle
of Worcester in 1651and how many items of domestic use came into common
parlance such as the Board being the reversible table in the hall where
meals were eaten and deals were done and the Chairman being the head
of the family who had the only chair, the others consigned to wooden
settles or benches. The original house has had a more recent brick shell
put around it which belies the interest within, but wait, its the topiary
you've come to see!

The restored parterre
The Parterre at Moseley, based on a pattern used by
the Reverend Walter Stonehouse in Yorkshire in the 1640's was planted
by the National Trust and has now reached maturity and is well worth
seeing. It consists of box hedging with box ball standards in strategic
places and is best seen, as intended, from an upper window, although
you will find this difficult on a busy day.

Moseley box specimens
The front door leads to a road along which King Charles
saw his dejected troops retreat along the road which was then a major
highway north. In this small section domestic in scale are some box
specimens which give it a charming character.

Guard of honour to doorway

The parterre in relation to the house
All photographs by Anthony Blagg.
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