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Lodge Park is England’s only surviving 17th century deer-coursing grandstand. Set within a landscape designed by Charles Bridgeman and part of the Sherborne Park Estate, the grandstand was built in 1634 to satisfy John ‘Crump’ Dutton’s love of gambling and entertaining.
There are lovely walks through the Bridgeman landscape and wider estate near Northleach in the Cotswolds, Gloucestershire.
The site is owned by the National Trust and the former grandstand is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.
I think that I was heavily influenced by the series "Yellowstone" for this image. Such beautiful country up there in Montana. Yesterday was a Montana-Monday-on-my-mind kind of day. Driving from one job to another, I didn't see any cowboys, or even horses or anything else that was "Montana". Sure, I live in "redneck" country with lots of big wheeled trucks with bellowing exhaust pipes that should be on a cruise ship, but these are New York cowboys, wearing baseball caps, not hats drinking beer other than "yellow jackets". Nothing Montana... until I drove past this "mountain range" of road dirt. With a slight dusting of snow, it gave me what I needed, something to satisfy my yearning for something Montana. So, John Dutton please enjoy this faux representation of vast pasture lands, distant mountains and, of course, the Big Sky. Oh, and John, if you want me to come out to the great State of Montana to bitch slap either one your kids, I'd be happy to.
Dirt pile in the 518. Johnstown, New York. Pentax K3 and Tamron.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, watched by World Economic Forum Young Global Leaders Director John Dutton, addresses a group of young business people on January 17, 2017, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]
World Economic Forum Young Global Leaders Director John Dutton introduces U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to a group of young business people on January 17, 2017, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]
Yellowstone Season 3 concept poster
All photos used are courtesy of Emerson Miller and Paramount Network.
Please do not repost without credit.
The above poster is custom made and in no way official, or affiliated with the company, actors, or characters it portrays. No copyright infringement was intended.
Lodge Park in Gloucestershire was built in the 17th Century as a grandstand for viewing the gambling sport of deer coursing. It was constructed by John 'Crump' Dutton who owned the nearby Sherborne Estate. In the 19th Century it was converted into a house and in 1982 it was bequeathed to the National Trust who have restored the building.
In This Season, Yellowstone TV Series Outfits are really famous. Season 2 of Yellowstone is going on and so its outfits. Kelly Reilly is found wearing this Cotton Jacket as John Dutton.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it’s course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it’s magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it’s present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
HYPE!s (Almost) Summer Launch Party
derekbradphoto.blogspot.com/2011/06/john-dutton-hypes-alm...
Written on back of photo: "John Dutton, Mom Frances Dutton, Mrs. Alice Madden, Laguna Beach February 10, 1952. Red geraniums in back - ground approx 8 ft high.