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Arnot Hill House in Daybrook was the home of the Hawksleys, a prominent Nottingham family. ... (1875–1907), nephew of the above, Nottinghamshire cricketer 1900 ...
A farmhouse, stable and wash house combined into a house, it is in brick with hipped slate roofs. The house has a three-storey central section, bowed to the north, and flanking two-storey wings. On the south side is a porch with a pantile roof. The windows are a mix of horizontally-sliding sashes and casements. [7] [14] II: Gedling House
The council is based at the Civic Centre in Arnot Hill Park. The building was purpose-built for the council in 1985 at a cost of £2.2 million. It was formally opened by Princess Anne on 1 November 1985.
The son of John Hawksley and Sarah Thompson and born in Arnot Hill House, Arnold, near Nottingham on () 12 July 1807, [2] Hawksley was largely self-taught from the age of 15 onwards—despite his education at Nottingham High School [3] —having at that point become articled to a local firm of architects under the supervision of Edward Staveley that also undertook a variety of water-related ...
Arnot may refer to: Arnot (surname) Arnót, a Hungarian village; Arnot Mall, a shopping mall in New York; Arnot Hill Park, a park in Arnold, Nottinghamshire; The Arnot baronets; Arnot Tower, a castle in Perth and Kinross; Arnot Power Station, South African Power Station
He was born on 23 March 1868 in Leeds to Anthony Higginbottom (1842–1895) and Elizabeth Ackroyd (1844–1913). When he was one year of age, his family moved to Arnold, Nottingham, where his father became the headmaster of the British School.
Arnold Hill Spencer Academy (formally Arnold Hill Academy) is a mixed secondary school and sixth form located in the county of Nottinghamshire in the East Midlands.It teaches children from 11 to 18 - Years 7-13.
Frederick never married, and on his death in 1800 the Papplewick estate passed into the hands of his niece, Catherine Judith Fountayne, for her lifetime. Catherine lived at Papplewick until 1822. On her death the Estate went to Richard Fountayne Wilson of Melton-on-the-Hill. He gave it by Royal Licence to his 10-year-old son, Andrew, in 1826.