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  1. Visit to garden most Sundays 2-5pm in winter, 2-7pm in summer. Visit to garden most Wednesdays in summer 2-7pm. When house and garden open days are timetabled, Historic Houses members wishing to redeem their offer of free admission are asked to email to reserve their place on specific date and time. Non-members can buy tickets from Eventbrite.

  2. Apr 2021. St Paul's Walden Bury is only a few miles from Stevenage and Hitchin but feels very rural. It is a survivor of a once popular style of garden, almost all swept away by Capability Brown and the landscape movement. The only comparable garden in the area is Wrest Park. Long hornbeam hedges shape viewpoints towards follies, statues and ...

  3. www.stpaulswaldenbury.co.uk › homeSt Paul's Walden Bury

    Moving Parts Theatre presents William Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing in the gardens of St Paul’s Walden Bury on Sunday 21 July from 6pm. Bring a picnic and enjoy the intrigue, drama, wit and wisdom of Shakespeare's timeless comedy. This is an outdoor performance, so come prepared for all weathers. You are invited to the shores of Sicily.

  4. Media in category "St Paul's Walden Bury" The following 4 files are in this category, out of 4 total. GOC St Paul's Walden 003 St Paul's Walden Bury (8730890789).jpg 3,828 × 2,875; 3.35 MB

  5. The mansion at St Paul's Walden Bury (early C18, additions by James Paine 1760s and Arthur Castings late C19, listed grade II*) stands on high ground at the southern end of the gardens and pleasure grounds, enclosed to the south and east by the park. The two-storey brick house falls into two main sections, the earlier, C18 wing standing to the ...

  6. St Paul's Walden Bury is a stately home and surrounding gardens of the Bowes-Lyon family located in the village of St Paul's Walden in Hertfordshire, best known for its connection to the late Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.

  7. 10 de abr. de 2022 · Paul’s Walden Bury was the childhood home of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, apparently a gardener, she is seen here wheeling her barrow along with her brother Sir David Bowes-Lyon. This fabulous and mighty oak must have seen many a childhood game played below its branches.