Sudbury Hall in Derbyshire was begun in the early 1660s, roofed and richly decorated in the 1670s and its interior further adorned in the 1690s. Yet the Jacobean characteristics of its plan and façades have led to suggestions that its structure was built much earlier in the seventeenth century (Figs 2 and 3).
Its creation was the life work of one man, George Vernon (1636–1702), who inherited Vernon estates in Derbyshire, Staffordshire and Cheshire upon the death of his father in February 1659. Sudbury was the most extensive of these. George Vernon had not, however, been brought up there. Upon their marriage in 1635, his parents had established themselves on his mother’s ancestral estate of Haslington in Cheshire. His mother was an heiress, the sole surviving child of a judge, Sir George Vernon, who died in 1639. George’s father did not inherit Sudbury until June 1657. George and his younger siblings were born at Haslington Hall, which remained the family’s home throughout the civil wars and commonwealth years, and was in due course part of George’s inheritance.