Edgeworth Manor is a Grade II* listed
Structure of particular architectural and/or historic interest deserving of special protection. country house in the village
Small rural collection of buildings with a church. of Edgeworth, Gloucestershire. The manor of Edgeworth was bought by Nathaniel Rider in about 1650, and the present-day house dates mainly from his rebuilding of the manor house in the late 17th century; fragments of the earlier building from the Tudor period have been found, particularly in the cellar. The south range was remodelled by Capel N. Tripp in 1882, and enlarged and remodelled again by Sir Ernest George in 1899.[1][2]
The stables and coach house at Edgeworth Manor are separately listed as Grade II buildings.[3]
The property was put on the market for £20 million in 2022, and was sold to a private buyer for £8.7 million in 2025.[2][4]
Architecture
The house is built of coursed rubble limestone with ashlarMasonry of squared and finely cut or worked stone, commonly used for the facing of a building. dressings, and has a stone slate roof. It is of two stories, with basement and attic, and has a central staircase. The 19th-century south range consists of two rooms, and the west range of the same date has a large hall and an additional staircase. The north wing has been demolished.[1]




