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The Adey family history From approximately 1650 in Painswick to the present day. The Croft school; photos of Painswick and surrounding area on geograph; BBC archive film of Painswick from 1980; Stroud Voices mid 20th century oral history from Painswick residents; History of the Church of St. Mary at Painswick; A Cotteswold Manor; being the ...
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Media related to Beacon House, Painswick at Wikimedia Commons 51°47′10″N 2°11′43″W / 51.78607°N 2.19520°W / 51.78607; -2 This article about a Gloucestershire building or structure is a stub .
Robins's painting allowed the garden to be restored in the 1990s under the direction of Painswick's owner, Lord Dickinson, who inherited the house in 1955. [6] [7] The garden is the only surviving garden of the rococo period which is open to the public. [3] It was designed and laid out in the 1740s. [8]
It was Pain fitzJohn, a relative of de Lacy, who is the namesake of the village of Painswick and the manor house. [2] Painswick Lodge has been the home of the Lord of the Manor for Painswick between 1530 and 1804, when the manorial rights were purchased by Thomas Croome , at which point the manor house for the area was at the nearby Beech Farm.
Holcombe House was originally built for a wealthy clothier from Painswick in the late 1600s, [2] and was later enlarged and remodelled in the early 1900s by Detmar Blow in the Arts and Crafts manner. [3] The house was subject of a painting by Charles March Gere in 1926. [4]
The Court House is a grade I listed house in Hale Lane, Painswick, Gloucestershire, England, within the Cotswolds.. The house was built in the late 16th century with additions in 1604, [1] for Thomas Gardener on the site of an earlier manor house.
Painswick", in Ancient and Historical Monuments in the County of Gloucester: Iron Age and Romano-British Monuments in the Gloucestershire Cotswolds (London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1976), pp. 91-94. Media related to Painswick hill fort at Wikimedia Commons