View allAll Photos Tagged Trusting
Photos from a National Trust Stourhead First Light Photography session on Sunday 27 October 2024 between 730-9am.
Images from the two night dinner event for Trust America with Jeb Bush. Joel Silverman Photography, serving the Denver Metro area.
All Hallows, Clixby, Lincolnshire.
Churches Conservation Trust.
Grade II* listed.
This little roadside church is the thirteenth-century chancel of a larger church which was a ruin until 1889, when the chancel was gently restored by Charles Hodgson Fowler (1840-1910) and a west porch added.
Font from St Peter, Low Toynton, c15. It consists of an octagonal bowl with panels containing carvings of angels, other figures, a Tudor rose, and other flowers. The base is also octagonal, and the stem incorporates carvings of saints.
Downingia pulchella or Flat-faced downingia, Flat-faced calico flower, Downingia insignis or Harlequin flower, Plagiobothrys leptocladus or Alkali popcorn flower and a single Seep monkey flower (Mimulus guttatus).
trusted yelp and ended up and basically at a cross between pizza inn & chuck e cheese. thanks yelp.
1 Likes on Instagram
Images from the two night dinner event for Trust America with Jeb Bush. Joel Silverman Photography, serving the Denver Metro area.
National Trust Building..© Yvonne Wallin All Rights Reserved. No usage allowed including copying or sharing without written permission
A visit to Greys Court, a National Trust run estate.
Greys Court is a Tudor country house and gardens in the southern Chiltern Hills at Rotherfield Greys, near Henley-on-Thames in the county of Oxfordshire, England. Now owned by the National Trust, and is open to the public.
As Redrefield it was the principal manor of the six manors held in 1086 (as listed in the Domesday Book) by the Norman knight Anchetil de Greye (c.1052- post-1086), ancestor of the prominent Grey family.
The mainly Tudor-style house has a courtyard and gardens. The walled gardens contain old-fashioned roses and wisteria, an ornamental vegetable garden, maze (laid to grass with brick paths, dedicated by Archbishop Robert Runcie on 12 October 1981) and ice house. Within its grounds are the fortified tower built circa 1347, the only remains of the medieval castle, overlooking the gardens and surrounding countryside, as well as a Tudor wheelhouse.
The house remains furnished as a family home, with some outstanding 18th-century plasterwork interiors. It is a Grade I listed building.
John de Grey, 1st Baron Grey de Rotherfield, one of the original founder Knights of the Garter, was granted a license to crenellate his Rotherfield house in 1346, when he also considerably enlarged the group of buildings and added a castle around 1347. The estate passed to the Crown in 1485 and was granted to Robert Knollys in 1514 for an annual rental of a red rose, remaining in the Knollys family until 1642, during which time the current house and its associated buildings were constructed.
Rotherfield Greys Castle, built around 1347
Sir William Paul bought the house in 1686 and it passed via his son William's daughter's dowry to Sir William Stapleton, 4th Baronet in 1724.
Between 1935 and 1937 the house was occupied by Evelyn Fleming, mother of the author Ian Fleming.
In 1937 the house was bought from the Stapletons by Sir Felix Brunner and his wife Lady Brunner (née Elizabeth Irving), the granddaughter of the Victorian actor-manager Sir Henry Irving. In 1969 the family donated the property to the National Trust, where Lady Brunner continued to live until her death in 2003.
The Cromwellian Barn - was an exhibition inside of this building about the women of Greys Court. No access upstairs though.
Grade II* listed building
Greys Court, Cromwellian Stables Approximately 40 Metres East
Details
ROTHERFIELD GREYS SU78SW 6/123 Greys Court, Cromwellian Stables approx 40 metres east GV II* Building of uncertain purpose, now tea room. C17. Red brick; plain old tile roof; brick stack. One-unit plan. 2 storeys and attic; 2-window range. Main front to west with entry to right return. Main front has three 2-light stone mullioned windows to ground floor; two 2-light stone mullioned windows to first floor and single 2-light stone mullioned window in cross gable to attic right. Lateral stack to rear. Studded probably C17 door to right return with wood surround. Interior: C17 panelling to ground and first floor rooms with painted arabesque friezes. Fireplace on ground floor has stone surround with flattened arch; and herring-bone tiles above. C17 fireplace on first floor. Wooden spiral staircase.
Listing NGR: SU7253583404
Building Royal Connections: Three Women of Greys Court
Bob Beaver Memorial Rainy day trust Charity Clay pidgeon shoot Royal Berkshire Shooting School Pangbourne 13th July 2017