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The Regency Town House is a Grade I listed historic town house, [2] now a museum, in Brunswick, an area of Hove in Brighton & Hove, East Sussex, England. The Regency Town House is located at 13 Brunswick Square near the beach in Hove. Brunswick Square forms part of Brunswick Town. The house was built in the 1820s. [2]
1719 – Town meeting house built. [1] 1722 - incorporated as a town June 14, 1722. 1731 - On April 2, 1731, Worcester was chosen as the county seat of the newly founded Worcester County; 1733 – Court House built. [2] 1763 – Old South Meeting house built (approximate date). [1] 1775 Post office established. [1]
Following the death of Holmes's father in 1909 – who left his three surviving children a sizeable fortune – Edward Carleton Holmes (Yngr) moved from Kent to a Regency town house at 31 Brunswick Square, Hove, East Sussex, where he died on 9 April 1932 aged 89.
The Regency Townhouses are heritage-listed former terrace houses and now commercial offices located at 57–61 Lower Fort Street, in the inner city Sydney suburb of Millers Point in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia. The property was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999. [1]
Historically, a town house (later townhouse) was the city residence of a noble or wealthy family, who would own one or more country houses, generally manor houses, in which they lived for much of the year and from the estates surrounding which they derived much of their wealth and political power.
Its use dates from the start of the Regency period at the end of the 18th century, and into the 19th when Brighton grew from a fishing village into a large town. [3] Bungaroosh is often found in buildings of that era in the town and in its near neighbours Worthing and Lewes [ 4 ] but is little known elsewhere except London. [ 3 ]
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The council closed Priory House in 2011 and the building was subsequently sold and converted to residential use, with the linking doorways to the town hall being blocked up. [16] [17] In March 2003 the town hall was entered by activists protesting at the start of the Iraq War, who caused significant damage to computers and furniture. [18]