Florence Nightingale's wisteria-and-ivy-clad childhood home is up for sale — and its incredible setting offers truly life-enhancing beauty
The beautiful Lea Hurst has gorgeous views, delightful rooms and a fascinating history.


Lea Hurst, in the traditional Derbyshire village of Holloway, is at first glance a classic and beautiful stone-built, Grade II-listed home overlooking the scenic Derwent Valley at the south-eastern edge of the Peak District.
Look beyond that first impression, however, and you find some fascinating history: Lea Hurst was Florence Nightingale’s much-loved childhood home, and it's now seeking a new owner. Blue Book's Sebastian Hipwood quotes a guide price of £3.75m for what is a splendid country home set in more than 19 acres of beautifully landscaped gardens and parkland on high ground overlooking the Derwent Valley.
The house offers generous living space on several levels, with four principal reception rooms, including a triple-aspect formal drawing room, a large kitchen/breakfast room, 13 bedrooms and eight bathrooms.
Lea Hurst was inherited in 1815 by Florence Nightingale's father, William Shore, as part of the estate of his great-uncle, Peter Nightingale, whose surname he assumed.
At the time, the site was occupied by a relatively modest Jacobean farmhouse, which Nightingale expanded and incorporated into the present house, built in the Elizabethan style between 1820 and 1821, when the woman who would become a trailblazing nurse and campaigner was a mere baby (she was born on 12 May, 1820). Somehow it makes her story all the more inspiring: she made her name during the Crimean War, a conflict so brutal she described it as being in 'the kingdom of hell'; yet she had spent her formative years in a home that is a little slice of heaven.
The Nightingale family moved to Embley Park in Hampshire in 1825, but they retained Lea Hurst as a summer house, where they spent several months of the year. It remained in the Nightingale family until 1846, after which it became a home for retired nurses, before being bought by the Royal Surgical Society as a nursing home, which operated until 2004.
Lea Hurst’s present owner, Peter Kay, was working as a banker in Singapore when he saw an advertisement announcing Florence Nightingale’s childhood home for sale.
Sign up for the Country Life Newsletter
Exquisite houses, the beauty of Nature, and how to get the most from your life, straight to your inbox.
In 2011, he completed the purchase of the house and spent the next three years renovating it through-out and a further 12 months re-creating its wonderful Victorian gardens.
Now, as the Kay family moves on to a new chapter in Asia, Mr Kay echoes the words of Florence herself, who wrote ‘it breaks my heart to leave Lea Hurst’, adding ‘but the most satisfying thing for us has been turning the house back into a family home for the first time since Florence and her sister were running around here in the 1820s. Our two youngest children were born in the house and it has been a wonderful place for children to grow up in’.
Lea Hurst is for sale at £3.75m — see more details and pictures.
Credit: Strutt and Parker
Best country houses for sale this week
An irresistible West Country cottage and a magnificent Cumbrian country house make our pick of the finest country houses for
-
Some of the finest landscapes in the North of England with a 12-bedroom home attached
Upper House in Derbyshire shows why the Kinder landscape was worth fighting for.
By James Fisher Published
-
The Great Gatsby, pugs and the Mitford sisters: Country Life Quiz of the Day, April 16, 2025
Wednesday's quiz tests your knowledge on literature, National Parks and weird body parts.
By Rosie Paterson Published
-
Some of the finest landscapes in the North of England with a 12-bedroom home attached
Upper House in Derbyshire shows why the Kinder landscape was worth fighting for.
By James Fisher Published
-
Could Gruber's Antiques from Paddington 2 be your new Notting Hill home?
It was the home of Mr Gruber and his antiques in the film, but in the real world, Alice's Antiques could be yours.
By James Fisher Published
-
What should 1.5 million new homes look like?
The King's recent visit to Nansledan with the Prime Minister gives us a clue as to Labour's plans, but what are the benefits of traditional architecture? And can they solve a housing crisis?
By Lucy Denton Published
-
Welcome to the modern party barn, where disco balls are 'non-negotiable'
A party barn is the ultimate good-time utopia, devoid of the toil of a home gym or the practicalities of a home office. Modern efforts are a world away from the draughty, hay-bales-and-a-hi-fi set-up of yesteryear.
By Madeleine Silver Published
-
Five beautiful homes, from a barn conversion to an island treasure, as seen in Country Life
Our pick of the best homes to come to the market via Country Life in recent days include a wonderful thatched home in Devon and a charming red-brick house with gardens that run down to the water's edge.
By Toby Keel Published
-
The finest interiors in Edinburgh? A seven-bedroom townhouse furnished by Robert Kime comes to market
Situated on one of the New Town's grandest terraces, this four-storey property is a collector's dream.
By James Fisher Published
-
A Grade II*-listed country manor with one of the most beautiful drawing rooms in England
If Old Manor Farm in Somerset is good enough for Pevsner, it's good enough for you.
By Penny Churchill Published
-
An eight-bedroom home in Surrey where an army of robots will look after your lawns
Do not fear the bladed guardians of Monksfield House. They are here to help.
By James Fisher Published