The White House, Aston Munslow

The White House in Aston Munslow, Shropshire, England is a medieval hall house that has undergone considerable alteration over the centuries. It is a grade II* listed building.

Description
The exterior of the current structure reflects three periods of rebuilding.

The East end is the oldest part, dating from the 14th  or 15th century. It is a hall house supported by cruck trusses. The interior was later divided by an inserted floor. The walls were originally half-timbered but later rebuilt in stone.

The central part of the current building dates from the late 16th or early 17th century. It is a box framed structure typical of the period.

The West end was added in the late 18th century when a drawing room and bedroom were added in the Georgian style. The North facade of the building was remodeled, hiding the Elizabethan framing.

The trusses of the East end provide evidence that this was originally the cross-wing of a still older building, demolished during the Elizabethan-era alterations. It is possible that the cellars beneath the central portion date from this earlier building. This would have been the manor house of Aston Munslow.

The name, "The White House", is recorded in a conveyance dated 1694, and shows that the house was whitewashed at that period.

Ownership
The house was the home of the Stedman family for some three hundred years, eventually passing by marriage to owners named Smith and then Farmer.

In 1947 it was sold to Walter Purser, whose daughter Miss J. C. Purser made an extensive study of the building and its history. She ran the building as a County Life Museum exhibiting agricultural and domestic implements.

In her eighties, Purser was unable to continue running the museum, and transferred the building to the Landmark Trust. The building is now maintained using income from its use as holiday accommodation.

Dovecote
In the grounds is a scheduled ancient monument, a dovecote dating from the 14th or 15th century. Its thick circular walls enclose an area 4.8 m in diameter. Within the walls there were originally about 500 nest holes where pigeons were bred for meat. At some point before 1920 the roof fell in, "during the owner's temporary absence from the property" followed later by part of the walls.