Thorpe Hall, in Thorpe hamlet, is a Grade II* listed Country House. The Hall was built in 1584 for Sir John Bolle who lived there until his death in 1606 and is buried in Haugh Church. A 17th-century
pigeoncote at Thorpe Hall is also Grade II listed, as is an 18th-century wrought iron gateway. From 1895 to 1906, Thorpe Hall was owned by Captain Julius Tennyson, nephew of the Poet Laureate,
Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Captain
Langston Brackenbury, MP for Louth, bought the Hall in 1906 and lived there until 1920. In the Second World War, Thorpe Hall housed evacuees and was later requisitioned as an Army Officers' Mess. After the war it was a Diocesan healing centre. Later it was home to Lady Evelyn Patrick, daughter of the 3rd
Earl of Lovelace. ==References==