The house was designed by architect
John Loughborough Pearson and built in 1856–59 for £8,000 () for
Reverend Robert William Hippisley, who was the local parish priest (rector) (1844–1899). The parish's lucrative farming and
malting across its provided a then-record salary for that parish of £525 by 1870. Pearson had previously designed
Treberfydd in
Brecknockshire for Robert Raikes (1818–1901), Hippisley's brother-in-law and grandson of
Robert Raikes, a wealthy
Anglican minister who increased junior education during and after the
Industrial Revolution through expanding a nationwide charity for
Sunday Schools. Pearson had completed restoration work on
St Edward's Church. Quarwood was extensively remodeled in 1954–58 by
Sir Denys Lowson. John Entwistle and his wife Alison bought the property as a weekend retreat in 1976, and Entwistle occupied the house until his death in 2002. In 2004 his son Christopher offered the house for sale at a price of £3.75 million (). The house is currently owned by Piet Pulford. ==See also==