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Fairfax House, Castlegate, York, 1755-62.

By John Carr of York (1723-1807).

For Viscount Fairfax of Emley.

Grade l listed.

 

Long Case Clock.

Noel Terry & his Collection.

An exceptional collection from the golden age of English cabinet-making and clock-making forms the centrepiece to the Noel Terry Collection.

 

Born in York in 1889, Noel Terry was the longstanding chairman and great grandson of the founder of the confectionery business, Terry’s of York. Over the course of his lifetime he formed an outstanding collection of Georgian domestic furniture and clocks which Christie’s have stated to be one of the best private collections of mid-eighteenth-century English furniture. The collection was originally housed at Goddards, Noel and Kathleen Terry’s Arts and Crafts style-home. He bought each piece on its own merit and was not interested in creating interiors in the style of the eighteenth century.

 

Terry’s tastes in collecting furniture were particular and surprisingly consistent, a dislike of gilding and anything too ornate, coupled with a demand for excellent quality. The collection, however, is not only significant because of its exceptional quality, but also because of its provenance. Indeed, its completeness as a collection (kept together in nearly its full entirety) helps to illustrate Terry’s collecting passions, the development of his taste and the evolutions which took place in the process of collecting in the 20th century.

 

A passionate lover of the city of his birth, in 1946 Terry was one of the four Founders of York Civic Trust, for which he served as Honorary Treasurer for twenty five years. It was this that led to his determination that the collection should remain for the benefit of the City of York and, after his death in 1979, his trustees offered the collection to the Civic Trust as a gift on the proviso that it was placed on permanent display.

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Fairfax House is a triumph of Georgian design. Bought by Charles Gregory, 9th Viscount Fairfax of Emley, for £2000 in 1759, he employed master architect John Carr of York to transform the existing building into a magnificent and fashionable townhouse. Lord Fairfax gifted the house to his sole surviving child making Anne Fairfax a property-owning woman in her own right.

 

Here both Anne and her Father spent the winter season. Standing on the thriving street of Castlegate, the main thoroughfare to York Castle, and sitting on the confluence of the rivers Ouse and Foss, Fairfax House was at the very centre of York’s polite society and perfectly positioned as a base from which to enjoy York’s burgeoning city-life and social scene.

Christmas Lights, Christmas Tree, Castlegate,

Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom

The 47 metre steeple is the highest in York. The former church is now a contemporary visual arts venue

Looking towards Union Street

Entrance to Kolkata Book Fair

11-17 Castlegate, Tickhill, South Yorkshire, c18.

Nos 13-17 Grade ll listed.

In York, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Picture of Hole 15 from CastleGate Minigolf in New Jersey. See our review at www.theputtingpenguin.com

Salvation Army Citadel stained glass window, Castlegate, Aberdeen

The Castlegate earlier this year

Gordon Highlanders, Memorial,

Castlegate,

Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom

Castlegate, with the Salvation Army Citadel (built on the site of Aberdeen Castle) and the Mercat Cross.

Gloucester House, Castlegate, York.

Unlisted.

This building is a mystery. It appears to be purpose built apartments - note the corner balconies - but when was it built and by whom? There is a crest on the first floor of the Castlegate elevation - whose is it? The baroque doorcase is quite an excess on an otherwise plain building - did it come from somewhere else?

Fairfax House, Castlegate, York, 1755-62.

By John Carr of York (1723-1807).

For Viscount Fairfax of Emley.

Grade l listed.

 

Long Case Clock.

Noel Terry & his Collection.

An exceptional collection from the golden age of English cabinet-making and clock-making forms the centrepiece to the Noel Terry Collection.

 

Born in York in 1889, Noel Terry was the longstanding chairman and great grandson of the founder of the confectionery business, Terry’s of York. Over the course of his lifetime he formed an outstanding collection of Georgian domestic furniture and clocks which Christie’s have stated to be one of the best private collections of mid-eighteenth-century English furniture. The collection was originally housed at Goddards, Noel and Kathleen Terry’s Arts and Crafts style-home. He bought each piece on its own merit and was not interested in creating interiors in the style of the eighteenth century.

 

Terry’s tastes in collecting furniture were particular and surprisingly consistent, a dislike of gilding and anything too ornate, coupled with a demand for excellent quality. The collection, however, is not only significant because of its exceptional quality, but also because of its provenance. Indeed, its completeness as a collection (kept together in nearly its full entirety) helps to illustrate Terry’s collecting passions, the development of his taste and the evolutions which took place in the process of collecting in the 20th century.

 

A passionate lover of the city of his birth, in 1946 Terry was one of the four Founders of York Civic Trust, for which he served as Honorary Treasurer for twenty five years. It was this that led to his determination that the collection should remain for the benefit of the City of York and, after his death in 1979, his trustees offered the collection to the Civic Trust as a gift on the proviso that it was placed on permanent display.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Fairfax House is a triumph of Georgian design. Bought by Charles Gregory, 9th Viscount Fairfax of Emley, for £2000 in 1759, he employed master architect John Carr of York to transform the existing building into a magnificent and fashionable townhouse. Lord Fairfax gifted the house to his sole surviving child making Anne Fairfax a property-owning woman in her own right.

 

Here both Anne and her Father spent the winter season. Standing on the thriving street of Castlegate, the main thoroughfare to York Castle, and sitting on the confluence of the rivers Ouse and Foss, Fairfax House was at the very centre of York’s polite society and perfectly positioned as a base from which to enjoy York’s burgeoning city-life and social scene.

View up Union Street from Castlegate

Rise of the Gulls by Stuart Allan - Friends of Anchor 20for20 Anchor Trail at Castlegate, Aberdeen

Gordon Highlanders Statue,

Christmas Lights, Christmas Tree, Castlegate,

Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom

Castlegate Church, York.

St Mary Castlegate, York.

 

Medieval Glass.

St Mary Castlegate, York.

 

Medieval Glass.

York St Mary's, a deconsecrated medieval church dating from 1020 which has been converted into a contemporary visual art venue. Castlegate, York, North Yorkshire.

Picture of Hole 10 from CastleGate Minigolf in New Jersey. See our review at www.theputtingpenguin.com

Newdigate House on Castlegate, built about 1675, and home for Marshall Tallard (the commander of the French Army - defeated at the Battle of Blenheim in 1705), He was placed on parole here for some years afterwards.

www.nottshistory.org.uk/articles/tts/tts1929/itinerary192...

It's now a restaurant: "World Service" with a walled garden.

www.worldservicerestaurant.com/

 

For a full screen view, tap on the image, and the same again to exit.

St Mary Castlegate, York.

 

Medieval Glass

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