SHALLCROSS AND YEARDSLEY HALLS. 



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a window of undoubtedly Elizabethan origin, which was prob- 

 ably re-used from some of the earlier buildings. On the 

 other side of the hall, in a similar position, but lighting a 

 cellar, is an exactly similar window, and with the exception of 

 the panelling in the dining-room and a doorway and stone 

 presently mentioned, these two windows seem to be the only 





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A. Victor Haslam. 



Shallcross Hall. A Fragment of Tapestry. 



Elizabethan work re-used in the building of the present hall. 

 The cellars are all on the north side, and are arched in brick. 

 In several of the rooms on the upper floors are large cupboards 

 formed in the arches of the central wall and elsewhere, and 

 in one room, supporting a beam, is a very interesting stone 

 corbel, which seems to be a much earlier piece of work, and 



