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Cheswick Green is a village and civil parish within the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull in the English county of West Midlands, incorporating the nearby hamlet of Illshaw Heath. [1] The settlement lies approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) south west of Solihull town centre.
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Earlswood is a village split between the counties of Warwickshire and the West Midlands in England. Most of the village is located in the Tanworth-in-Arden civil parish of the Stratford-on-Avon District, Warwickshire, while the northern part is in the Tidbury Green parish in the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull.
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Leafy artists' suburb: a tile-hung detached house on Rupert Road, Bedford Park, by the architect Norman Shaw, 1879. Bedford Park is a suburban development in Chiswick, London, begun in 1875 under the direction of Jonathan Carr, with many large houses in British Queen Anne Revival style by Norman Shaw and other leading Victorian era architects including Edward William Godwin, Edward John May ...
The original Chiswick House was a Jacobean house owned by Sir Edward Wardour, and possibly built by his father. [3] It is dated c. 1610 in a late 17th-century engraving of the Chiswick House estate by Jan Kip and Leonard Knyff, [4] and was constructed with four sides around an open courtyard. [4]
Cheswick (/ ˈ tʃ ɛ z ɪ k /) is a new village bridging the South Gloucestershire and Bristol borders. It straddles the boundaries of Stoke Gifford , Filton and Lockleaze and lies close to the major employment sites of the University of the West of England (UWE), MoD Abbey Wood and Hewlett Packard .
Cheswick House is a Grade II listed Victorian country house built in 1859 by Robert Crossman of Berwick-upon-Tweed, a brewer. In 1883 it was inherited by his son, Colonel (later Sir) William Crossman ; the property remained in the Crossman family until 2002.