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  2. William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Armstrong,_1st...

    In 1887 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Armstrong, of Cragside in the County of Northumberland. His last great project, begun in 1894, was the purchase and restoration of the huge Bamburgh Castle [ 16 ] on the Northumberland coast, which remains in the hands of the Armstrong family.

  3. Cragside - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cragside

    Three years later, at the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria, Armstrong was ennobled as Baron Armstrong of Cragside, and became the first engineer and the first scientist to be granted a peerage. [37] [c] Among many other celebrations, he was awarded the freedom of the City of Newcastle. In his vote of thanks, the mayor noted that one in four of ...

  4. Baron Armstrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baron_Armstrong

    The title became extinct on his death in 1900. The title was revived three years later, on 4 August 1903, for his great-nephew William Watson-Armstrong, who was created Baron Armstrong, of Bamburgh and of Cragside in the County of Northumberland. Born William Watson, he had assumed the additional surname of Armstrong by Royal licence in 1889.

  5. William Watson-Armstrong, 3rd Baron Armstrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Watson-Armstrong...

    William Henry Cecil John Robin Watson-Armstrong, 3rd Baron Armstrong (6 March 1919 – 1 October 1987) was an English landowner and peer, a member of the House of Lords from 1972 until his death. Born at Jesmond Dene House , Newcastle-upon-Tyne , Armstrong was the only son of William Watson-Armstrong, 2nd Baron Armstrong and his wife Zaida ...

  6. William Watson-Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Watson-Armstrong...

    In 1903 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Armstrong, of Bamburgh and Cragside in the County of Northumberland, [8] a revival of the barony which had become extinct on his great-uncle's death three years earlier. Lord Armstrong was married three times. He married firstly Winifreda Jane Adye, daughter of General Sir John Miller Adye, in 1889 ...

  7. Wikipedia : Peer review/Cragside/archive1

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Cragside/archive1

    Designed by Richard Norman Shaw for William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, Cragside is a house of firsts. The first in the world to be lit by hydroelectricity, it also topped Mark Girouard's list of Victorian houses that should be saved for the nation. Armstrong was the first scientist and the first engineer to be raised to the peerage, taking ...

  8. William Watson-Armstrong, 2nd Baron Armstrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Watson-Armstrong...

    Armstrong was born in 1892 as the first child of the businessman William Watson-Armstrong and Winifreda Jane (née Adye). When Armstrong was 11 in 1903, his father was created Baron Armstrong after inheriting his industrialist great-uncle's wealth but not title in 1900, at which point he became The Hon William Watson-Armstrong.

  9. Cragend Silo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cragend_Silo

    Expanding his landholdings around Cragside, Lord Armstrong acquired Cragend, a nearby 16th-century farmhouse [7] two miles south of Rothbury. [8] He started work on modernising the farm in the 1880s, [ 8 ] and around 1895 built the experimental hydraulic silo building now known as Cragend Silo.