The Building of Stanmer House and the Early Development of the Park C. 1720 to 1750

The Building of Stanmer House and the Early Development of the Park C. 1720 to 1750

Auteur : Sue Farrant

Date de publication : 1979

Éditeur : Sussex Archaeological Society

Nombre de pages : 199

Résumé du livre

"Stanmer Park is a large public park within the Brighton and Hove city boundary. It is a Local Nature Reserve[1] and English Heritage, under the National Heritage Act 1983, has registered the park on the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England at Grade II level.Stanmer Church, 2006The eighteenth century park contains the Grade I listed Stanmer House and also 25 Grade II listed buildings and structures. These form the village of Stanmer and Stanmer Church within the park, which would once have been the estate of the house. All were private until bought by Brighton's Council in 1947.[2] There is a café, Stanmer Tea Rooms, in the village.Stanmer House was built for the Pelham family in 1722 around an earlier building. A mistress of King George IV later lived there. It was used as the first administrative centre of the 1961 University of Sussex, during the construction of its campus over a part of the park. A walk of elm trees was preserved within the campus design, by architect Sir Basil Spence. The house reopened in June 2006 after extensive restoration but there have been difficulties in bringing it into successful use.[3]The church, adjacent to the village pond, was built in 1838 on the site of a 14th-century building. The church is now maintained by the Stanmer Preservation Society, which also runs the Donkey Wheel."--

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