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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Brocket_HallBrocket Hall - Wikipedia

    History. Location. Park and lake. In popular culture. References and notes. External links. Brocket Hall. Coordinates: 51.801°N 0.246°W. Brocket Hall, main (north) façade. Brocket Hall is a neo-classical country house set in a large park at the western side of the urban area of Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire, England.

  2. The earliest evidence of a house dates back to 1239, it was originally called ‘Watershyppes’ and owned by a Simon Fitz Ade. 1440. The house was rebuilt and renamed, this is when the “Brockets”, originally from Yorkshire, established themselves as one of Hertfordshire’s leading families.

  3. 23 de nov. de 2022 · Brocket Hall, a splendid Grade I neo-classical mansion set in beautiful parkland near Lemsford and not far from Welwyn Garden City, was built in 1760. It has a long and impressive history, but is perhaps best known as the home of two of Britain’s Prime Ministers, Lord Melbourne and Lord Palmerston, and for its connection with Queen ...

  4. 18 de sept. de 2021 · News. History. Hertfordshire. Brocket Hal: The scandalous history of Hertfordshire’s most notorious manor house. One of its owners was involved in a £4.5 million car fraud. News....

  5. Historia. Ubicación. Parque y lago. En la cultura popular. Referencias y notas. Enlaces externos. Brocket Hall. Apariencia. ocultar. Brocket Hall es una casa de campo neoclásica ubicada en un gran parque en el lado occidental del área urbana de Welwyn Garden City en Hertfordshire, Inglaterra.

  6. 14 de ago. de 2013 · The Brockets originated from Yorkshire and quickly made Hertfordshire their permanent home. In 1440 the house was rebuilt and renamed. The Brockets established themselves as one of Hertfordshire's leading families. In 1507, a Sir John Brocket was sheriff of his own county and of Essex.

  7. Brocket Hall in Hertfordshire. +++. “…the ancient Seat of the Brockets, situated upon a dry Hill in a fair Park, well wooded and greatly timber’d, enclosed with a brick Wall on the West Side of the Road, for the Length of a Mile, and plentifully water’d with the River Lea.”