Redisham Hall
Standing in a landscape park newly-created in the early-nineteenth century, Redisham Hall was built in the 1820s for John Garden Esq. close to the site of the demolished Little Redisham Hall, the sixteenth century manor house for the lost village of Little Redisham that was incorporated into Ringsfield parish during the early-seventeenth century. The site of the lost settlement and fragmentary remains of its church are within the present park, its perimeter incorporating ancient woodland and early-nineteenth century shelterbelts of trees. The park contains a number of mature parkland trees with a late-nineteenth/early-twentieth century avenue and entrance lodge. There is an ornamental bridge over a tributary of the Hundred River leading to the house site, where outbuildings and a partly-walled kitchen garden appear to have eighteenth century elements and are probably related to enclosures associated with the original Elizabethan house. A ha-ha separates the pleasure gardens from the parkland and encloses lawns, herbaceous borders, shrubberies and ponds. A small plant nursery is situated in part of the walled garden.
Plant nursery and gardens open to the public on specific days during the summer

