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Haybridge hall

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English vocabulary and history

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Haybridge hallOnline version

English vocabulary and history

by maria pesce
1

Conservatory Century wealthy exception follows owned as choosing behind most

Welcome to Haybridge Hall and thank you for to use our Guide - O - Matic to help you make the out of your stay here . This guide is available in six other languages . Just ask at the ticket office . The general history of the house is :
Haybridge Hall was constructed at the end of the 15th and was originally called Hawken Hall after the first family who it . Jack Hawken was a local businessman who had become thanks to success with wool exports . The house has changed very little in the last 500 years with the of the Dawson which can be found the ticket office .

2

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This was in 1941 when the British was using Haybridge Hall as a for the 8th Army . Churchill is said to have spent two nights at Haybridge in the main guest bedroom in the build up to the Normandy in June 1944 .
The Hawken family only managed to this fine property for around a before they had to sell up and the name Haybridge was used by the who bought it . The Yardley family were not from this area , but from the north of England . They owned Haybridge for some 200 years and turned the area into productive farmland where various , from wheat to potatoes , were grown .
The Yardley family left Haybridge in 1722 and the property was left for some sixty years or so , falling , in the , into quite a state of . It was during this period of that the small church built on the grounds of the house in the early 16th Century , into ruins . Little is known about this church although one drawing of it survives . A local artist , Timothy Warsden , sketched the church in 1728 , a mere six years after the Yardley family moved out .

3

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Haybridge Hall's destiny seemed to have been that of - neglect and eventual destruction but the local author William Hoaten bought Haybridge in 1784 and spent three years and a considerable amount of money renovating the mansion . By now , the amount of land belonging to the property had been considerably reduced and the few acres you see today .
The Hoaten family stayed at Haybridge until the beginning of the Second World War when the British Army the property . After the war , the surviving members of the Hoaten family decided it would too costly to move back into Haybridge Hall and so the property came to be owned by the charitable organisation English , who runs it to this day .
English Heritage an extensive renovation operation in the 1970's , costing over ten million dollars . The aim of this work was to return Haybridge Hall to something of its glory days when it was owned by the Yardley family for two centuries . Specialist builders and from all over the world were employed in an to reconstruct the best possible example of a 17th Century country house .
Haybridge Hall remains to this day one of the finest examples of British renaissance architecture and the furnishing within gives an authentic idea of what country life was like three to four centuries ago in this country . Last year , over 60 , 000 visitors took the same path through Haybridge Hall that you yourself are taking today .