The
Shropshire Archives holds a collection of materials on the building of the 'new' hall by Henry Reginald Corbet, who invited the architect,
George Devey, 'to inspect the old house of Adderley to make it habitable'. Devey concluded that little could be done on account of its condition and outlook, recommending it be pulled down and a new hall placed on an elevated position to the northwest. The architect produced plans that were not to his clients' satisfaction and following discussions, led by Mrs Corbet, a new design agreed. Four months following the inspection, in May 1877, the demolition of the old hall commenced with the digging of the cellars of the new. The materials from the demolition were used in the construction of the approved designs. The Victorian building was made from red bricks – mostly made locally at works "in the hole between the pool and the Church". Windows and coping stones carved from stone were made from the portico columns that formed the entrance of the former building – this stone being of higher quality than the stone purchased from the quarry. ==Completion, demise and demolition==