His son the second Baronet replaced the old manor house with the present brick and limestone mansion house in 1747.[4] The entrance front has three storeys and five bays, symmetrical around the slightly advanced and pedimented central bay.[4] A three-bayed service wing was added to the west in 1905 and raised to three storeys in 1930.[3]
The Levinge family seat was moved to Westmeath in Ireland and the house was let out and in 1814 was sold to William Evans|[3] of Allestree Hall. During part of the time of Evans' ownership the house was occupied by the vicar Rev Carr, a relative of Evans. After the death of Sir Thomas Evans in 1892, another clerical descendant, Rev Claud Lewis, had the use of the house.[3]
The house was sold in 1915 and again in 1931 when it was acquired by the Inglefield (later Crompton-Inglefield) family.[3] John Frederick Crompton-Inglefield was High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1938.
It later became the home of the Shields family.[3]
^ abcdef"Parwich Hall". Parwich & District Local History Society. September 2003. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
^ abPevsner, Nikolaus (1978) [1953]. Derbyshire. The Buildings of England. Revised by Elizabeth Williamson. Yale University Press. p. 297. ISBN0-14-071008-6.