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Brewing family legacy transformed into spectacular homes

Rangemore Hall, base for the Bass family of beer makers, has been divided into spectacular homes

The legacy of the Bass brewing family comes not only in the form of its beers, but also in the village of Rangemore in East Staffordshire, developed by Michael Thomas Bass as a place for staff to live.

They worked not at the brewery four miles away in Burton but at Rangemore Hall, .

Bass built Rangemore Church, licenced in 1867, in the village and a school in 1873.

His son, the first Lord Burton, was a generous patron, adding to the original church building and establishing the Rangemore and Reading Room for the benefit of his estate workers. Lord Burton also endowed the playing field for the use of all villagers.

Rangemore Hall is an impressive mansion house – something that has been recognised in its Grade II listing.

Designed in a loosely Italianate style, it has an early 19th century core with the principal sections of the hall dating from the late Victorian era. The distinguished central pediment is inscribed with the date 1900.

In 1909, Nellie Bass, Baroness Bass, inherited the hall and she split her time between Rangemore and two of her properties in Scotland.

When it became too big for her it was sold to Staffordshire County Council.