In 1538 the Abbey and estates were surrendered to
King Henry VIII and in 1560
Queen Elizabeth I granted Stoughton to
John Harington. The Stoughton estate was then purchased by
Thomas Farnham who was the ‘Chancellor of the Exchequer’ to Elizabeth I. For over three hundred years the Stoughton Estate remained in the ownership of the Farnham family and its descendants. The family name changed through the marriage of Farnham to the
Beaumont family who are believed to be descendants of
John Beaumont.
Sir Thomas Beaumont, 1st Baronet of Stoughton Grange lived at the house until he died in 1676. His son
Sir Henry Beaumont inherited the estate was also an MP for Leicestershire. The house and estate later passed to Anthony Keck of Lincolns Inn as his wife was Anne Busby of Beaumont, daughter of William Busby and Catherine Beaumont his wife. They had a son
Anthony James Keck who became a politician and married Elizabeth Legh (daughter of Peter Legh of Lyme). The couple lived at Stoughton Grange and had six children, the only son to survive and inherit was
George Anthony Legh Keck who lived at the house until he married his cousin Elizabeth Atherton in 1802 so that he could inherit the family’s
Bank Hall estate in Lancashire. It was following the marriage that he moved to Bank Hall which he later renovated in 1832 and used Stoughton as a second home. Legh Keck remained a member of parliament for Leicestershire and frequently travelled between the estates. Upon the death of Legh Keck his brother-in-law
Thomas Powys, 3rd Baron Lilford, inherited his estates, but also died a year later. In 1871 Harry Leycester Powys Keck lived at Stoughton Grange and was
High Sheriff of Leicestershire. Powys Keck was the last line of the family to live at the house until 1913 when the house was put up for sale. The house was not sold and it remained unoccupied until it was demolished in 1925–6. However, Powys Keck moved away after the Stoughton estate was bought by the Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd. in 1919 and the site of the mansion was then known as Grange Farm, the centre of the society's dairy-farming in Leicestershire. ==Architecture==