Sign up to Feel Good Families
Find activities and ideas to move, play and smile together
We use cookies to improve your experience and improve our services. To find out more, read our privacy notice and cookie policy
The Lawn, also known as Sutton Lawn, is on the site of the former Sutton Hall.
The park, located in Sutton in Ashfield, is mainly comprised of grassed areas with areas of woodland and avenues of trees. The lake is located in the south east of the park, and is well used by anglers and walkers.
Rumbles Café is located to the west of the site and is located close to the play areas, a skate park, ball court and outdoor gym. The site also has bowling and tennis clubs.
The Lawn Pleasure Grounds encompass the grounds of the former Sutton Hall, built as the residence of Samuel Unwin, a merchant hosier, and the land associated with his nearby Cotton Spinning Mill and Mill Lake. Sutton Hall and most of the Mill complex no longer exist, but the Mill ruins and adjacent lake form the focal feature of the park today.
The Lawn has the Green Flag award.
You'll find these amenities:
There is a free car park at Sutton Lawns.
Sutton Lawn dates back to the mid-eighteenth century when Samuel Unwin built his magnificent castle-styled cotton mill and family residence, Sutton Hall.
A 1795 survey describes The Lawn as being 13 acres 3 roods and 29 perches with a smaller piece about 4 roods. The survey then adds the Lower Lawn, being 4 acres 3 roods and 13 perches in size. The Dam being 7 acres.
In 1779 Catherine Hutton, a visitor to the Unwins’ home, writing to her brother, describes:
"A shrubbery which is the seventh part of a mile in circuit encompasses their garden, and hence the plantation is continued down to a lake and a bath, and beyond are walks cut into a wood.”
The mill itself changed hands several times in the 1800s before coming into the ownership of silk throwsters, Allsop and Dobson in 1920. The waterwheel and windmill have long since gone but the listed ruins, now known as Dobson’s Mill, have been converted for residential use.
In 1863 Sutton Hall was sold and subsequently demolished in 1865. There has been some speculation that subterranean passages exist under the Lawn Grounds, although there is little substance to this theory.
A new house was built on the site of Old Sutton Hall in 1884 and the grounds of the property were leased by the Sutton Urban District Council, “for the benefit of the inhabitants, from representatives of the Unwin family, in 1903, becoming known as The Lawn Pleasure Grounds”.
A caretaker, Mr Henry Parnell was employed at a weekly salary of £1 1s and £50 per annum is paid in rent, the entire cost of maintenance being met out of the general district rate of the parish. It is a much favoured spot for the holding of al fresco gatherings. The Lake (previously known as the Mill Dam) became a boating lake as part of Sutton Lawns Pleasure Grounds.
Lawn Avenue
Sutton in Ashfield
Nottinghamshire
NG17 5FU
For pitch and court bookings:
Rumbles Café
Sutton in Ashfield Lawn Tennis Club
Check the Rumbles Cafe website and the Tennis Club House Facebook page for their opening times.