John Lowe acquired the Estate in 1747 during the reign of George II and it remains a family home. The name ‘Locko’ is derived partly from the old French ‘loques’ meaning rags, and in the 13th century there was a hospital for lepers, built by the order of St Lazarus, behind the house you see today.
Locko Hall is a Grade II* listed building which has been beautifully restored over the last 50 years. The stunning parkland was laid out in 1792 by William Emes who landscaped much in the style of Capability Brown.
he 300-acre Locko Park estate, situated a mile north of Spondon, has been home to the area's landowners since the 11th Century.

Ownership of the estate and surrounding area is recorded back as early as the Doomsday book of 1086, when the land is recorded as belonging to a Saxon called Stori. Following the Norman Conquest, the Manor of Spondon was one of 210 manors awarded to Baron Henri de Ferriers, a Norman companion of William the Conqueror, for his bravery and support during the Battle of Hastings.

Order of St Lazarus In 1180, descendant William de Ferriers gave the land to the Burton Lazars of Leicestershire, an order of St. Lazarus monks dedicated to the care and nursing of lepers. The monks founded a leper hospital on the Locko Estate to the rear of the existing Locko Hall building. Indeed, the name Locko derives from the hospital, coming from the old French word 'loques', meaning rags.
Although they were centred on their charism of caring for those afflicted with leprosy, the knights of the Order of Saint Lazarus notably fought in the Siege of Acre in 1191, Arsuf, and in the 1192 Battle of Jaffa. Battle of La Forbie in 1244 and in the Defense of Acre in 1291.[4] The titular seat was successively situated at Jerusalem, then Acre. After the fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the order split into two main branches – in Italy and in France (at the Château Royal de Boigny-sur-Bionne)


The Manor was forfeited in the reign of Henry III (1216-1272) because the Ferriers supported a rebellion against him, and it was then granted to Edmund, Earl of Lancaster. Much of the local area, including the Locko estate and hospital, was destroyed by the Great Spondon Fire of 1340.

Later, in the reign of Henry IV (1399-1413), the village came into the possession of the Byrde family. Redistributions of royal lands during the Tudor era allowed William Gilbert of Barrow to acquire Locko manor with Spondon from William Byrde in 1563, and several generations of Gilberts afterwards maintained ownership.

The Locko Hall and Park estate as we know it today began to take shape in the early 18th century. The main hall itself was built in 1720 by Francis Smith of Warwick. The landscaping of the park and lake was the work of William Emes and John Webb in the late 1700s, the commission having previously been turned down by Capability Brown.

The final descendant of the Gilbert family, John Gilbert Cooper, sold the estate to John Lowe in 1747. The last of the Lowes willed the Manor to a relation, William Drury, in 1790 who assumed the name Drury-Lowe. It was William who commissioned the landscaping of the grounds and other development work on the estate.

Much of the interior of the hall was decorated by local architect Henry Stevens in the 1850s, inspired by Drury-Lowe's passion for Italian artwork and architecture.

Today, the Hall and estate is still owned by descendants of the Drury-Lowe family but has been home to the Palmer family since the 1960s who carried out extensive restoration on the hall and park after taking residence.

Locko remains predominantly a private estate, although a number of open days are occasionally held and the park grounds are used for a small number of events each year. The grounds are also now used as a popular wedding and corporate events venue.

There is a public right of way through the park grounds, taking visitors past the impressive lake that dominates the grounds, pictured right.. Access close to the Hall itself though remains private. The park can be accessed from entrances on both Locko Road and Dale Road.