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Anstey Hall. Anstey Hall is a Grade I listed, former country house built c. 1700 within its own parkland. Once owned by writer and poet Christopher Anstey and later by the polymath Robert Leslie Ellis, it was leased to the PBI for many years. It is now used for weddings, parties, corporate events and meetings.
Ansty Hall is a 17th-century country house, located in the village of Ansty, and near Coventry and Rugby, Warwickshire, which is now a four star hotel operated by Exclusive Hotels. [2] It is a Grade II* listed building surrounded by 8 acres of landscaped gardens.
1921: James Odell Vinter, of Southfield, Cambridge [239] 1922: Sir Charles Walston, of Newton Hall, Newton, Cambridge [240] 1923: Douglas James Proby of Elton Hall, Peterborough [citation needed] 1924: George Ralph Cunliffe Foster, of Anstey Hall, Trumpington, Cambridge [241] 1925: Harold Fred Martin Peatling, of Leverington Hall, Wisbech [242]
Volume 2. Cambridge University Press, 1940. p. 470. Photo of Trumpington Volunteer Training Corps at Anstey Hall, November 1915, with "Dr Bury (Vicar, Vice President)" (front row, 9th from left), in: Trumpington Volunteer Training Corps (VTC), WWI, trumpingtonlocalhistorygroup.org.
The Longfellow House–Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site (also known as the Vassall-Craigie-Longfellow House and, until December 2010, Longfellow National Historic Site) is a historic site located at 105 Brattle Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Anstey was the third child and only son of the Rev. Dr. Christopher Anstey, the rector of Brinkley in Cambridgeshire, and his wife Mary Thompson, born on 31 October 1724 in Trumpington. [1] He was educated at Eton College and King's College, Cambridge, [2] where he distinguished himself for his Latin verses. He became a fellow of his college in ...
There are 51 Grade II* listed buildings in Cambridge, England. In the United Kingdom, a listed building is a building or structure of special historical or architectural importance. These buildings are legally protected from demolition, as well as from any extensions or alterations that would adversely affect the building's character or destroy ...
Anstey trained teachers to staff the gymnasium and swimming pool built at the Cadbury’s factory in Bournville. [2] When the Anstey Old Students’ Association (AOSA) was founded in 1911, Anstey was appointed president. [7] In 1918, she expanded her courses to three year programmes with extended teaching practice and medical study. [8]