Difference between revisions of "MRP: Buildings"

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'''KENT'''
 
'''KENT'''
 
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[[MRP: Bishop's Palace|Bishop's Palace]]
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- Dallison family house, Bishop's Palace or Place, Halling, Kent
 
[[MRP: Broome Park|Broome Park]]
 
[[MRP: Broome Park|Broome Park]]
 
- Dixwell, later Oxenden family house, Broome Park, Kent
 
- Dixwell, later Oxenden family house, Broome Park, Kent

Revision as of 06:41, August 26, 2011

Buildings

LONDON

The Corner or Old Corner (?of Old Bailey), London
Elizabeth Dalyson's lodgings, Throgmorton Street, London
Sir George Smith's house, Throgmorton Street, London
Grays Inn Chambers, London



ENVIRONS OF LONDON

William Ryder's house, Bethnal Green
St. John Street, Clerkenwell (Sir Maximilian Dallison)
St. John Street, Clerkenwell (Lady Oxenden)



DENBIGHSHIRE

Myddleton family, Chirk Castle, Denbighshire



ESSEX

Sir Robert Abdy's house, Albyns, Stapleford Abott, Essex



KENT
Bishop's Palace
- Dallison family house, Bishop's Palace or Place, Halling, Kent
Broome Park
- Dixwell, later Oxenden family house, Broome Park, Kent
Deane
- Oxenden family house, Deane, Deane House, or Deane Park, Kent
The Hamptons
- Stanley, later Dalyson house, Hamptons, Kent
Langdon
- Richard Master's & later James Master's house, East Langdon, Kent
Maydekin
- Henry Oxinden's house, Maydekin, Barham, Kent
Unnamed house in Plaxtol
- Thomas Stanley's house, Plaxtol, Kent
Stonepitt
- Sir Thomas Piers' house, Stonepitt, Kent
Yotes Court
- James Master's house, Yotes Court, Kent



DENBIGHSHIRE


Myddleton family, Chirk Castle, Denbighshire

Sources



ESSEX



Sir Robert Abdy's house, Albyns, Stapleford Abott, Essex

COPPER ENGRAVING Albyns Essex 1806.png
Sir Robert Abdy purchased the manor and manor house of Albyns in 1654 from Baron Coleraine for £5,360. The house was demolished in 1954, but at Abdy's time was what the VCH: Essex describes as a "very fine manor house," which incorporated parts of a smaller, earlier C16th house. A survey of the building exists, carried out by the Royal Commission on Historical Monuments, 1920. The house was brick-built, enclosing a courtyard on four sides. The VCH, drawing on the RCHM, describes it as "entirely of the King James Gothic," with mullioned and transomed windows, and two story bays on three sides. There was a long gallery on the first floor of the west wing, with fine panelling and an elaborate chimney. The quality of fittings and plasterwork was high. "The shields in the spandrels of the older fireplaces were painted with the date 1654 and the initials A B K (for Robert and Katherine Abdy) and the panelling bore the arms of Abdy and Gayre." There is a detailed estate map of Albyns from the period of its acquisition by Sir Robert Abdy, the work of John Kersey. "It shows the layout of the grounds with stables and a dovehouse to the east of the mansion and a straight avenue leading south from the main entrance."

Sources

XXXX, A new display of the beauties of England, 1st vol., 3rd ed. (London, 1776), p.39
Royal Commission on Historical Monuments (XXXX, 1920), p. ?
Powell, W.R., 'Stapleford Abbots: Introduction', A History of the County of Essex: Volume 4: Ongar Hundred (1956), pp. 222-223
Powell, W.R., A History of the County of Essex: Volume 4: Ongar Hundred (1956), plan of Albyns, Stapleford Abbots, from an estate map of 1654 (Essex Record Office D/DC 27/1121), p. 226

Essex Archives: D/DAy Records of the Abdy family of Albyn, Stapleford Abbots and Felix Hall, Kelvedon
Essex Archives: D/Day E3 Rents, Manor of Albyns, Garnish hall and Barndon Hall, c. 1640



KENT


Dixwell family house, Broome Park, Kent

Sources

CKS-U2691 Correspondence from Lord Kitchener concerning Broome Park, Barham (1911-1918)