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Jesmond Dene House


FieldValue
nameJesmond Dene House
locationTyne and Wear, England, UK
pushpin_mapUnited Kingdom Tyne and Wear
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Tyne and Wear
imageJesmond Dene House - geograph.org.uk - 325561.jpg
captionJesmond Dene House
grid_nameOS grid
grid_position
coordinates

Jesmond Dene House is a 19th-century mansion house at Jesmond Dene, Newcastle upon Tyne, England which is now a hotel. It is a Grade II listed building.

History

The house, which was designed by John Dobson for Thomas Emerson Headlam, a physician and Mayor of Newcastle, was completed in 1822. However Armstrong did landscape and develop the adjacent Jesmond Dene into a woodland park and garden.}}

In 1851, Dobson made substantial changes to the house for its new owner, William Cruddas. In 1871 the house was bought by Lord Armstrong's business partner Andrew Noble. At this time Noble had architect Norman Shaw make significant alterations to the house. In 1897, Noble carried out further extensive alterations and extensions to the house, with the assistance of architect Frank West Rich, including a new west wing, a great hall and a Gothic-style porch.

Following the death of Noble's widow in 1929 the house was put to various uses, including a college, a civil defence establishment, a seminary and a residential school. Following an extensive restoration and refurbishment in 2005,

Notes

References

References

  1. {{National Heritage List for England
  2. {{efn. This was not the home of [[William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong. Lord Armstrong]], a wealthy industrialist, whose nearby house has been demolished, though its [[Jesmond Dene Banqueting Hall. Banqueting Hall]] survives.Alan Morgan, ''Jesmond: From Mines To Mansions'' (2010), p. 76.
  3. [http://www.jesmonddene.org.uk/History.htm History of Jesmond Dene] {{webarchive. link. (2008-06-07)
  4. Harry Pearson. "Jesmond Dene House, Newcastle-upon-Tyne | Travel". The Guardian.
  5. Lonely Planet. "Jesmond Dene House in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England". Lonely Planet.
Wikipedia Source

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