Lionel Place’s family originated from the
Yorkshire area and were related to titled gentry gentry in that county, being
descended from the Places of Dinsdale in County Durham. A report in December 1818
(when the Castle was offered sale for £30,000) reveals that Lionel Place paid
£14,000 for the Castle and grounds and £12,000 for the surrounding farms.
Lionel's investment in the Castle didn't end there however, and in 1809 he
commissioned the well-known architect Robert Lugar to redesign the Castle,
incorporating the old house and making it castellated. The Hall was
transformed into a stone-faced building, possibly using Attleborough sandstone,
of a similar nature to Arbury Hall. The North and South Lodges may have been
built at this time or modified from earlier buildings, and were designed in the
Picturesque and Cottage Orne architectural styles which developed in the 1790s.
The Castle grounds were also landscaped at
this time, possibly by a disciple or assistant of Lancelot 'Capability' Brown
and a map from 1811 shows ornamental lakes and a boating river course. Around
1816 The Grove and Grove cottages were built. The Grove - a large residential
house which survives to this day - was subsequently occupied by Isaac Swinnerton, a sawmill owner who
became the overseer of the Weddington Estate. The relationship between Mr Swinnerton and Mr Place appears to have had its ups and downs however, and
records for April of 1817 detail Place indicting Swinnerton for "carrying soil
from off the road" (Mr Swinnerton won the case). Lionel Place seems to have been
no stranger to the courts, and the 19th August of the same year:
"An adjourned petty sessions was held at Weddington Hall to inspect Roads lately
indicted by Rev. Heming and others. Several of the principal people of Nuneaton
attended and stated to the magistrates where the bridge formerly stood and where
the road went".
Subsequent to, and presumably as a result of, this meeting a bridge across the
River Anker (Weddington Meadows Bridge) leading from the top of Abbey Street to
Weddington was erected and ground raised at Lionel Place's expense on the 2nd
January 1818. It was later this year that Place offered the Estate for £30,000,
although in the event he only sold a 196 acre farm at Weddington for £13,000.
Despite further run-ins with the court (most notably in October of 1818, when he
"kicked the posterior of a labourer (Davis) with such force (and the man being
ruptured) he was so affected that his life was for some time in imminent
danger") Lionel Place was elected Sheriff of Warwickshire in 1826. Mr Place
died, aged 72, in 1838 and was buried at the nearby St. James' Church, Weddington, with the estate passing to his wife, Sophie.