listed. The medieval 'vill' or settlement of Addecote has had a written history since
Saxon times. The original name is probably 'Addancot', the cottage of 'Adda'. At the time of the
Norman Conquest, the 'vill' formed part of the manor of Little Ness, which was given by
William the Conqueror to his kinsman,
Roger de Montgomery. In 1603
King James I, by letters patent, granted the manor of Little Ness, including Adcote, to the Protestant branch of the Howard family,
Thomas, Earl of Suffolk, who in turn sold it to the Craven family. Adcote was divided up during the early part of the eighteenth century and was reunited by the controversial colonial figure –
Clive of India. From Clive's will we learn that he had purchased the lands stretching from
Baschurch to Little Ness. In 1850 Robert Clive's great grandson, sold his land to Henry Dickenson, of
Coalbrookdale, who was married to Deborah Darby. In 1868 the property was conveyed to Rebecca Darby, the widow of Alfred Darby. It is also considered that the house is "perhaps the best example of the country houses built
(by Shaw) between 1870 and 1880". Adcote House "has become famous mainly due to Shaw's autograph drawing A masterpiece of Architectonic drawing, it now adorns the Diploma Gallery,
Royal Academy of Arts, London." Shaw designed Adcote in Tudor style and used the local building traditions to give the house a sense of continuity with the past The house is built of local
sandstone with tall chimneys,
pointed gables and
mullioned and transomed windows. Its features include a
Great hall with a
Minstrels' gallery,
William De Morgan tiled fireplaces and stained glass windows by
Morris & Co., after cartoons by
Walter Crane. The house was built for Rebecca Darby, the widow of Alfred Darby I (1807–52). Alfred Darby II inherited the house from his mother. Alfred (1850–1925) was the final family link to Coalbrookdale: he was chairman of the company from 1886 until his death, and thus the Darby's long and illustrious history in the regional and national industrial revolution ended. His son, Lieutenant Maurice Darby was killed in 1915 during the First World War and is buried in Little Ness. In his memory in 2015, Adcote School opened the Maurice Darby Scholarships for five-day girls from Shropshire "able to display exceptional leadership skills", worth up to 100 per cent of fees. Upon Alfred's death the house was sold to the Adcote School Trust. Adcote was converted to a boarding school in 1927. The original stable and coach houses have been converted into classrooms, science laboratories and the Junior School. ==Previous Headmasters and Headmistresses of Adcote==