An early house was damaged by fire in 1624 or 1625 and was bought by
Lord Cottington in 1632, who by 1637 had finished restoring it, and may have used the services of
Inigo Jones. Around 1715, Cottington put a classical
façade on the house and removed the formal gardens. Between 1745 and 1753
William Beckford re-aligned the estate, making the main entrances to the north and the south. He added a five-arched bridge over the lake, placed a folly on the high ground to the west of the house and demolished the old parish church. This house was inherited in 1770 by Beckford's son,
William Thomas Beckford, who extended the lake and built
grottoes on the lakeside. In the 1790s Beckford began to build
Fonthill Abbey, on high ground a mile to the southwest, and he had parts of the house demolished to provide building material. The west portion of the house survived, becoming known as The Pavilion, and was bought around 1829 by
James Morrison, the millionaire draper and railway investor. His second son,
Alfred, added one storey and an Italianate tower. The house was demolished in 1921 except for the west service wing which was converted into cottages that were demolished in 1975. In 1972 it was replaced by a smaller house, still the seat of the
Morrison family. As of 2013 the estate amounted to . ==Fonthill Abbey==