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South, garden front of the house, 1921 House ground floor plan, 1921 The upstairs gallery, 1921. Deanery Garden (or The Deanery) is an Arts and Crafts style house and garden in Sonning, Berkshire, England. The house was designed and built by architect Edwin Lutyens between 1899 and 1901. [1] It is a Grade I listed building.
Deanery Garden. II* Sonning: Garden: 1901: 1000445: Upload Photo: ... The Japanese Garden at the New House. II* Shipton-under-Wychwood: Garden: 1965
Deanery Garden: Sonning: Berkshire: 1899: 1901: Arts and Crafts style house with garden laid out by Lutyens and planted by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll; [7] one of the several commissions from Edward Hudson, founder of Country Life magazine. Folly Farm
Print of Sonning Bridge (1799) with the tower of St Andrew's Church, Sonning, in the background. Sonning was the location of an early Saxon minster. In 909 AD, this became one of the two cathedrals of the See of Ramsbury and Sonning. [3] Some Saxon stonework can still be seen in the church today.
Sonning Hockey Club, [11] Reading Hockey Club, Reading R.F.C., and Berkshire Shire Hall R.F.C. [12] can all be found on Sonning Lane. Sonning Hockey Club was the first club in the county of Berkshire to be awarded Club 1st National Hockey Accreditation for junior coaching and development.
The Deanery is the name of several buildings, including: Deanery Garden , a heritage-listed house in Berkshire, England The Deanery, Brisbane , a heritage-listed house (also known as Adelaide House) in Queensland, Australia
About 150 metres East on the opposite side of the B478 road are Deanery Garden and St Andrew's Church. Close by, just over Sonning Bridge, is The Mill at Sonning, now a dinner theatre. On the opposite Oxfordshire bank of the Thames is another riverside hotel and restaurant, the French Horn.
The village of Sonning, on the south bank of the River Thames in Berkshire, England.On the opposite bank in Oxfordshire is the hamlet of Sonning Eye.Historically, Sonning was a very large parish covering many villages and hamlets on both sides of the Thames, including Earley, Woodley, Eye and Dunsden.