Decline as well as demolition
With the close of the Great Battle came the closing phase of Weddington Castle. Adhering to the completion of the battle, the Red Cross withdrew from Weddington Castle and also it was set up for auction in 1919, although it failed to find a purchaser.
In 1922, Henry Nigel Post Shawe sold the Castle to Percy Harold Howe for ₤ 7,000. Howe-- an electrical contractor by trade-- planned to transform the Castle right into luxury flats. On the 22nd September of that year, strategies were released, detailed approach to building residences on the Estate lands. Brief descriptions of the Castle were consisted of in these strategies: such as the entrance hall with the polished oak floor (gauging 22 ′ x 11 ′); the library with the polished oak floor (29 ′ x 19 ′); a marble chimneypiece etc. The yards' crushed rock walks were referred to as being studded with 4 old cedars, a climbed garden, glasshouses, a winery, a greenhouse as well as a peach house.
The fast growth of Nuneaton
Throughout 1922 the Shawe family lobbied for the Estate to be converted into housing development, and plans for this were thoroughly reviewed at meetings during 1923 and 1924. Many objections were increased over the necessity for real Estate and the inadequacy of sewage arrangements. With the rapid development of Nuneaton, such worries were high up on the top priority checklist of the neighbourhood authorities (indeed, in 1930, one in ten houses in Nuneaton was classified as unfit to live in). Meanwhile, from November 1923 to July 1924, the Castle has exchanged flats. This was to be the fate of numerous similar Halls in the area, such as Lindley Hall and Caldecote Hall.
By the time Nuneaton integrated Weddington in 1931, Weddington's population had skyrocketed to 643, and the area of the previous parish of Weddington had already grown to 881 acres. It is paradoxical that whereas in the last centuries, the migration of workers from Weddington to bigger towns produced the rural room for the Weddington Estate to establish; it was the growth of workers' lodging in Nuneaton back right into Weddington in the 20th century that brought about its death.
End of an age
It is worth keeping in mind at this moment that this expansion was not restricted to the Weddington location, as well as from the 1920s onwards, this circumstance was to be duplicated throughout Nuneaton (and also, without a doubt, around the nation). This proclaimed the completion of an era and caused the destruction of an abundant and varied collection of historic buildings in the Nuneaton location, including Lindley Hall and Attleborough Hall. Amongst the few structures that have survived today are the impressive Arbury Hall and Caldecote Hall (which is now converted to private apartments). Others, such as Merevale Hall and Maxstoke Castle, survive as personal residences.
Taken down to the ground
Judging by a newspaper record from 1926, swiping on the run-down Weddington estate was rife before it was destroyed. In 1928, on the sixth July, a notice of sale showed up, and the news made that Weddington Castle was to be destroyed. On the 19th October 1928-- after a rich and varied history returning practically 1,000 years-- Weddington Castle was torn down to the ground.