As you travel around the countryside deep in Surrey, you don’t expect to find a Turkish Tent perched up on a ridge with extensive views across the countryside, but here it is, a short distance from the Grecian Temple of Bacchus. The Turkish Tent, now reconstructed in robust long-lasting materials as one of the many […]
Cemeteries have recently suffered in terms of their meaning in the modern world. Once the height of social status, many have fallen into decline and have been seen as a financial burden whereas the most forward looking see them for what they are – a unique library of social history and a much-loved green space […]
Gunnersbury Park is a place of contrasts. How many parks have two mansion houses side by side and how many have parts that are smart and newly-restored, and others that are fenced off, boarded up, derelict or recently-destroyed? While there have been previous houses in Gunnersbury Park, located to the north of the M4 […]
For those of you who know the history of Hampton Court Palace, you will know of its reputation for ghosts who wander the dark corridors at night. While we have all been focused on our personal experiences during the recent coronavirus lockdown, have we neglected the spiritual world? Perhaps they have been enjoying their new […]
Home of the great early 20th-century socialite Margaret Grenville, the old Regency house was extensively remodelled in 1906 as a base for her country house parties and filled with her collection of fine paintings, furniture, porcelain and silver. The future George VI and Queen Elizabeth spent part of their honeymoon here in 1923. While the […]
One of the joys of wandering around cities is finding hidden histories behind the roads, the modern developments, the retail parks and the housing developments. The 20th century was not kind to Colliers Wood. One indeed there was a wood here, but it was gradually cleared from the late 19th century and today the area […]
Have you ever wandered through a graveyard and seen a gravestone that so attracts your attention that you wonder more about the occupant or occupants underneath? Sometimes it might be because the gravestone, once erect, is now leaning at a dangerous angle or the sepulchre has a gaping hole – was the occupant trying to […]
There are two houses called Wakehurst Place: one, the original house in West Sussex; the other a replica in Rhode Island completed in 1887 under the supervision of the American architect Dudley Newton for the sportsman and politician James J. Van Alen from plans designed by the British architect/designer Charles Eamer Kempe, and now owned […]
Like many castles in Britain, Sissinghurst has had a rocky history until, in derelict condition, the castle and farm was put on the market in 1928 for the grand sum of £12,000, with alas no offers of interest for two years. Fortunately, by one of those pieces of serendipity, Vita Sackville West and Harold Nicolson […]
Did past generations anticipate future restrictions such as social distancing? Certainly, they were aware of sensible health precautions, including covering faces, from the various epidemics that seem to be a characteristic of human civilisation through the centuries. The various designers who have contributed to the layout of the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew knew a […]
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