Offers in region of
£850,000
4 bed town house for saleOnesacre Hall, Onesacre, Oughtibridge S35
4 beds
3 baths
3 receptions
Added on
About this property
The magnificent Onesacre Hall - Grade II*
A four/five bedroom manor house dating back to 1620
3640 sq.ft of accommodation
Expansive living spaces with exposed stonework, beams and fireplaces
Beautiful grounds with kitchen garden, manicured beds occupying 0.5 acres
A chance to own a part of history surrounded by open countryside
In the small hamlet of Onesacre
Walking distance to local amenities in Oughtibridge village
A fantastic opportunity to create an amazing family home
Full video & 3D Matterport tour (including defurnish & measure tool)
|^| A magnificent Grade II* Listed manor house dating to 1620 |^| Set in the ancient hamlet of Onesacre, recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 |^| Four to five bedrooms across three floors totalling 3,648 sq ft |^| Expansive kitchen dining room with original stone fireplace and exposed beams |^| Extraordinary sitting room with ancient arched inglenook fireplace |^| Glorious mature gardens with raised vegetable beds and orchard |^| An irreplaceable piece of Sheffield history |^|
There are properties that simply defy categorisation — and Onesacre Hall is one of them. A Grade II* Listed manor house of extraordinary historic significance, this remarkable family home dates to 1620 and stands in the ancient hamlet of Onesacre, a settlement so old it was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. Constructed in warm Yorkshire sandstone with steeply pitched gables, mullioned windows, period chimney stacks and climbing wisteria softening its centuries-old facade, the Hall presents an elevation that stops you in your tracks. From the aerial view alone — the house cradled by mature woodland, sweeping lawns, kitchen gardens and open countryside beyond — it is immediately clear that this is no ordinary home. Properties of this age, scale and authenticity rarely come to the open market, and when they do, they do not stay long.
Accommodation
Onesacre Hall extends to an exceptional 3,648 square feet across three floors, and every one of those square feet carries the weight of four centuries of history. Yet far from feeling like a museum piece, the Hall has been thoughtfully lived in and loved — its ancient bones given warmth and colour by the current vendors, who have created a home that is at once deeply characterful and genuinely comfortable.
The ground floor is arranged around a series of generous, interconnecting reception spaces. The living room is perhaps the most extraordinary room in the house — a space that rewards a long, quiet moment to take in what surrounds you. Ancient arched stonework frames a vast inglenook fireplace of a scale that speaks of medieval feasting and firelight, whilst original exposed oak ceiling beams — blackened with age — span the width of the room above. Stone-mullioned leaded windows draw in the garden light, and an original heavy oak door connects the space to the entrance hallway. It is a room that has witnessed four hundred years of Yorkshire life, and it feels every inch of it.
Adjacent, the second living room is equally impressive in scale — with further exposed beams and generous proportions that make it a wonderful space for family gatherings or quieter evenings alike.
The heart of the home, though, is the magnificent kitchen dining room — a vast, open space, centred on a simply spectacular original stone fireplace with an ancient mantel beam, and fitted with bespoke blue shaker-style cabinetry, solid oak worktops and a white Belfast sink beneath a run of original stone-mullioned windows that look out onto the kitchen garden and greenhouse beyond. A substantial central island in reclaimed pine anchors the dining area, and a range cooker sits within the kitchen units perfect for meal preparation. The flagstone floor, the richly patterned roman blinds, the original beams above: Every element conspires to create a kitchen that is simultaneously historic and utterly alive. A generous utility room with aga which heats the properties water and a W.C complete the ground floor arrangement, alongside useful storage rooms and access to the cellar — a room providing ample storage.
Upstairs
The first floor is home to three magnificent bedrooms, all retaining the oak beams, deep window reveals and mullioned leaded-light windows that define this extraordinary house. The primary bedroom is a room of grand proportions — light, calm and serene, benefitting from its own en suite bathroom and a sense of peaceful removal from the world that only a house this old can truly provide. A second bedroom of similar scale enjoys open countryside views through its period windows, whilst a third generous double room — currently used as a children's bedroom — reminds you that Onesacre Hall, for all its history, is very much a family home.
The principal family bathroom is a beautifully appointed room of real substance — generous in size, with full tiling and a quality suite including separate bath and shower cubicle.
The second staircase leads to the third floor, where two further bedrooms sit within the roofline — both of excellent proportions — alongside a large loft space that extends to over twenty feet in length, offering exceptional potential as a studio, study, games room or further accommodation subject to any necessary consents.
Grounds
The grounds at Onesacre Hall are a garden-lover's paradise, and together with the house itself, they form a setting that is close to unique. The principal lawn sweeps away from the front of the Hall in the manner of a true manor house garden — bordered by mature specimen trees, shaped yew hedging, colourful cottage borders and meandering stone paths. A beautifully framed archway cut through a mature yew hedge leads through to the front and kitchen garden beyond, where raised timber vegetable beds are fully planted and productive, with a full-size glass greenhouse alongside for propagation and protected growing.
To the front and side, a generous gravel driveway provides ample parking, leading to a double garage — a substantial stone-built structure in keeping with the wider property. There are also further outbuildings adjacent to the garage for extra storage or potential for conversion. The whole plot is enclosed by original stone boundary walling, giving the grounds a complete sense of privacy and permanence that is simply impossible to replicate in any modern setting.
Onesacre
Onesacre is one of the most ancient and unspoilt hamlets in the Sheffield area — a place of deep historical roots, open skies and extraordinary countryside. It sits on elevated ground above the Don Valley, with far-reaching views across Oughtibridge and immediate access to some of the finest walking in the region. The village of Oughtibridge is within minutes on foot or by car, providing everyday amenities, a primary school and regular bus links into Sheffield. The city centre itself is approximately eight miles distant and readily accessible via the A616, whilst the wider motorway network can be reached via the M1 at Sheffield or Barnsley. Yet despite this connectivity, Onesacre retains a profound sense of remoteness and peace — a hamlet that time has been kind to, and where the past feels genuinely, tangibly present.
Onesacre Hall is not simply a house. It is a piece of English history.
Freehold
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