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The Cloisters Cross (also known as the Bury St Edmunds Cross), is a complex 12th-century ivory Romanesque altar cross or processional cross. It is named after The Cloisters , part of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, which acquired it in 1963.
Bury St Edmunds has been in the unified county of Suffolk since April 1974. [99] Previously the town had been part of the county of West Suffolk of which Bury St Edmunds was the county town. The county of West Suffolk had been established in 1889. [102] Since 2009, Suffolk County Council has its Bury St Edmunds offices at West Suffolk House. [103]
Moyse's Hall is a building in the Suffolk town of Bury St Edmunds.It is a Grade I listed building [1] and is thought to have been originally built circa 1180. [2] [3] It is probable but not certain that it was a Jewish merchant's house. [3]
The majority of NRHP properties in Wayne County are in Detroit. These properties represent over a century's worth of the city's growth, from the Charles Trowbridge House (built in 1826, and the oldest known structure in the city) to structures in the Detroit Financial District built in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The grounds and site of the formal gardens and statuary today constitute Hardwick Heath (55 acres (220,000 m 2) of the former Cullum estate turned into public parkland), Bury St Edmunds District Scouts Hardwick Heath Campsite, the West Suffolk Hospital, the grounds of Hardwick Manor and housing developments. The site of Hardwick House itself is ...
The Athenaeum is a Grade I listed building [1] and a major venue in Bury St Edmunds, England. Even before substantial rebuilding the site was used as an Assembly Rooms for the town in the eighteenth century. The building was rebuilt in 1789 and further developed in 1804 under a subscription scheme established by its new owner, James Oakes. [2]
Ickworth House is a country house at Ickworth, near Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, England. It is a neoclassical building set in parkland. The house was the residence of the Marquesses of Bristol until 1998; the house was given to the National Trust in 1956, but between then and 1998 the marquesses leased the east wing.
The complex lies within the original precincts of Bury St Edmunds Abbey and was originally the site of a monastic grammar school. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The oldest part of the complex, the old court building, dates back to 1750: the two-storey building was remodeled in the early 19th century and was further restructured to the designs of William McIntosh ...