Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sterns was a nightclub located at Highdown Towers on Highdown Hill in Worthing, West Sussex. It was situated off the A259 road just north of Ferring on the South Downs . It became known as a major centre of UK rave culture in the south of England during the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Historic house: Jacobean country house with state rooms, art collection Hammerwood Park: East Grinstead: Mid Sussex: Historic house: 1972 country house designed by Benjamin Latrobe: Henfield Museum: Henfield: Horsham: Local: website, local history, culture High Salvington Windmill: High Salvington: Worthing: Mill: 18th century post windmill ...
Worthing Museum and Art Gallery is in the centre of Worthing near the grade II* listed St Paul's. [2] The building, which celebrated its centenary in 2008, was originally designed to house the town's library as well as the museum, the library section being funded by Andrew Carnegie. It is the largest museum in West Sussex.
Beach House Park, Worthing; Beach House, Worthing ... Sport in Worthing; Steamhammer (band) Sterns Nightclub; ... Worthing Museum and Art Gallery; Worthing Pier;
According to the Historic American Buildings Survey at the Library of Congress, the house, which they describe as a “modest 1960s ranch-style house” was built in 1961, and updated in 1974 ...
1902 - The borough of Worthing is extended to include parts of Broadwater and West Tarring; 1908 Worthing Museum and Art Gallery opens; King Edward VII stays at Beach House for the first time; Worthing's first fire station is built on High Street; 1909 - Sir Frederick Stern purchases a site on Highdown Hill that becomes Highdown Gardens
In 2013, Stern and his wife, Beth Ostrosky Stern, invested $52 million in a sprawling 3.25-acre estate next to the property. Media personality Howard Stern’s lavish Palm Beach, Florida, mansion ...
The gardens are owned and maintained by Worthing Borough Council with free admission. Created from a chalk quarry where there was little soil and unfavourable conditions for plant growth, the Chalk Garden at Highdown is the achievement of Sir Frederick Stern (1884–1967) and his wife, who purchased the 8.52 acres (3.45 ha) in 1909 and worked ...