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- Horstead_Hall abstract "Horstead Hall was a country house in Norfolk that was demolished in the 1950s.The village of Horstead in the county of Norfolk is not short of country houses. Towards Norwich lie Horstead House and Heggatt Hall, while towards Buxton lies the Horstead Hall estate. The house lay in the middle of a substantial park. A seventeenth-century house stood here until 1835, when it was rebuilt in the Tudor style by Edward Harbord, 3rd Baron Suffield. The lodges, one at Mayton, the other on the Buxton-Horstead Road, date from this period.Edward Harbord, 3rd Baron Suffield rebuilt the house for his eldest, Edward Vernon Harbord, 4th Baron Suffield son on his marriage to Miss Gardiner. However, the third Baron died from injuries sustained in a riding accident on the day of the wedding, and the house was adapted for the use of the dowager baroness. Charles Harbord, 5th Baron Suffield was brought up at the hall. Following his inheritance of Gunton Park, the house was let out until it was bought by the Birkbeck family.Owners included the Batcheler family (18th century), the Suffields, who rebuilt the house, and latterly the Birkbecks. Sir Edward Birkbeck entertained Prime Minister Lord Salisbury there in 1887. During World War II the house was requisitioned by the War Office and used by a cipher unit, who put up numerous huts in the grounds, some of which survive. The hall's Italianate watertower, which stood among outbuildings, now derelict, is visible from the roads around the park. A chapel also survives, equally derelict.The estate was sold in 1947 and most of the house came down soon after. Today part of the estate is used for quarrying. Substantial estate buildings survive, and part of the house remains, albeit in derelict condition. A pipe organ from the house is in the church at Ashby St. Mary.".
- Horstead_Hall wikiPageExternalLink a3023164.shtml.
- Horstead_Hall wikiPageExternalLink 30129028270206.jpg.
- Horstead_Hall wikiPageExternalLink Summary.aspx?pos=5.
- Horstead_Hall wikiPageID "9424606".
- Horstead_Hall wikiPageRevisionID "490431842".
- Horstead_Hall hasPhotoCollection Horstead_Hall.
- Horstead_Hall subject Category:Country_houses_in_Norfolk.
- Horstead_Hall point "52.737 1.3355".
- Horstead_Hall type Artifact100021939.
- Horstead_Hall type Building102913152.
- Horstead_Hall type CountryHouse103118969.
- Horstead_Hall type CountryHousesInNorfolk.
- Horstead_Hall type Dwelling103259505.
- Horstead_Hall type House103544360.
- Horstead_Hall type Housing103546340.
- Horstead_Hall type Object100002684.
- Horstead_Hall type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Horstead_Hall type Structure104341686.
- Horstead_Hall type Whole100003553.
- Horstead_Hall type YagoGeoEntity.
- Horstead_Hall type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Horstead_Hall type SpatialThing.
- Horstead_Hall comment "Horstead Hall was a country house in Norfolk that was demolished in the 1950s.The village of Horstead in the county of Norfolk is not short of country houses. Towards Norwich lie Horstead House and Heggatt Hall, while towards Buxton lies the Horstead Hall estate. The house lay in the middle of a substantial park. A seventeenth-century house stood here until 1835, when it was rebuilt in the Tudor style by Edward Harbord, 3rd Baron Suffield.".
- Horstead_Hall label "Horstead Hall".
- Horstead_Hall sameAs m.0288cl6.
- Horstead_Hall sameAs Q5906571.
- Horstead_Hall sameAs Q5906571.
- Horstead_Hall sameAs Horstead_Hall.
- Horstead_Hall lat "52.737".
- Horstead_Hall long "1.3355".
- Horstead_Hall wasDerivedFrom Horstead_Hall?oldid=490431842.
- Horstead_Hall isPrimaryTopicOf Horstead_Hall.