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Grosvenor House was one of the largest townhouses in London, home of the Grosvenor family (the family of the Dukes of Westminster) for more than a century. Their original London residence was on Millbank , but after the family had developed their Mayfair estates, they moved to Park Lane to build a house worthy of their wealth, status and ...
The records had a catalogue number series starting at S-1, but the series was fairly short-lived. Only three releases have been discovered. [9]S-1 "Farewell to Arms", from the 1932 film A Farewell to Arms (Music and lyrics by Allie Wrubel and Abner Silver) (Matrix L-989) by Ben Fields and his Dance Band (nom de disque for Syd Lipton's Band) [10] b/w "A Thousand and One Nights" (Matrix L-997 ...
Download as PDF; Printable version ... Grosvenor Hotel may refer to: The Chester Grosvenor Hotel, Chester, England; Grosvenor House Hotel , London, England; This page ...
JW Marriott Grosvenor House London, formerly the Grosvenor House Hotel, is a luxury hotel that opened in 1929 in the Mayfair area of London, England. Across from Hyde Park , the hotel is built on the former site of the 19th century aristocratic Grosvenor House residence.
Peterborough House, 19th century engraving of a 1666 illustration. Peterborough House (alias Millbank House, later Grosvenor House), on the south-west side of Parsons Green, near Eel Brook Common, [1] was a London townhouse owned by the Mordaunt family, Earls of Peterborough and later by the Grosvenor family.
Eaton Hall from the east, showing the current house at left and the Victorian Eaton Chapel at right. Eaton Hall is the country house of the Duke of Westminster. It is 1 mile (2 km) south of the village of Eccleston in Cheshire, England. The house is surrounded by its own formal gardens, parkland, farmland and woodland.
Grosvenor House Hotel. Arthur Octavius Edwards (1876–1960) was an English builder, property developer and hotel manager best known for building the Grosvenor House Hotel in London in the 1920s. Edwards was born in 1876 in Ripley, Derbyshire, the son of Edgar James and Ellen Edwards; his father was a civil engineer.
Thomas Cundy the younger [1] (1790 – 15 July 1867) was an English architect, son of another architect of the same name. He joined his father's practice and ultimately succeeded his father as surveyor of the Grosvenor Estate, and held the position during the main phase of the development of Belgravia and Pimlico by the contractor Thomas Cubitt.