LAST week saw the launch onto the market of one of Suffolk’s most intriguing country houses, the imposing Grade II*-listed Mockbeggars Hall—a secluded Jacobean mansion set on high ground to the south of the village of Claydon, with the A14 to the east and the valley of the River Gipping, a tributary of the Orwell, to the west.
Joint agents Jonathan Penn of Jackson-Stops in Ipswich (01473 218218) and Georgie Veale of Knight Frank (020–3995 0779) quote a guide price of £1.45 million for the handsome brick-built house, with its Elizabethan façade and striking Dutch gables, reputedly built in 1621 for the Aylmer family, with major alterations carried out in the late 19th or early 20th century. The house has been substantially improved in recent years by the present owners, who bought it in poor repair