Why did The Hall become known as Kingston House, and who owned it between the Hall family and the Moulto’s between the years 1710 and 1848?
The last member of the Hall family, John, died in 1710. John had no legitimate heirs to continue the family line, so the estate passed to his illegitimate daughter, Rachel Baynton of Great Chalfield. Rachel married William Pierrepont, the Duke of Kingston when she was just 15 years old; they had two children, and their son Evelyn inherited The Hall.
The Duke died in 1713 aged only 21 from smallpox, and Rachel went on to become the mistress of Lord Lumley, having two children by him. Lord Lumley cast her away whilst pregnant with a third child, and it is said that she died of a broken heart soon after.
Rachel and William’s Son, Evelyn Pierrepont became the second Duke of Kingston and renamed The Hall ‘Kingston House’. The Pierreponts were a wealthy family with many large and elaborate houses so did not have a regular need for the accommodations of the comparably small Hall. As a result, a number of its rooms were rented out to wealthy tenants such as clothiers for use as offices, workers accommodation and storage, and the contents were moved to other nearby properties.
In 1751 Evelyn leased the building to local clothier Thomas Rogers for seven years at £40 annually, and stated that Thomas was responsible for preserving and maintaining the glass windows, locks, keys, bolts and gardens - this meant that Thomas had to pay the window tax, which for a property with this many windows would have been substantial!