The original Manor of
Foston and Scropton was held by the Agard family from the 14th to the 17th century. It was bought by John Bate in 1679. Richard Bate was
High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1705. Brownlow Bate sold the estate to John Broadhurst in 1784. The 17th century
manor house was destroyed by fire in 1836, but many parts of that house survive. A new
Jacobethan house was designed by
T. C. Hine of
Nottingham and built in 1863. Its main two storey front has eight bays and an off-centre three-storey tower. The house is now a
Grade II listed building. HM Prison Service acquired the hall and grounds in 1953. During its Prison Service history Foston Hall has been a detention centre, an
immigration centre, and finally before its closure during 1996 a satellite of
Sudbury Prison. It was re-opened on 31 July 1997, following major refurbishment and building work, as a closed-category female prison. ==The prison today==