Yes Kev, both vids played to the end...I quite enjoyed watching them, ..well done.
Cracking vids Kev. Never seen the interior of Crocky Hall before, even though I used to go egging/conker collecting within 100 yards of the place when the whole estate was off limits to the great unwashed of Canny Farm and Liverpool
Anyone recall the gamekeepers that prowled the estate?
Hiya Paul,
Conker Lane was our El Dorado as kids in Canny Farm. We used to get there by running across the field near the Alt, close to Crocky Hall Lane. The gamekeepers were mental. I still have a Liverpool FC scrapbook from 60s/70s. In the back I recorded the prices of birds eggs and comments about the "Gameys",
No, I guess most people havn't seen it. I was very lucky to have wondered around unchallenged, wherever I wanted to go.
I could see the humour as it happened tbh. It suddenly made me realise I was going to make the vid public . Proper Most Haunted stylee
Allerton - Once home to the Fletcher family covering 140 years. The first house on the site was built in the early 1800s which was destroyed by fire. The second house was built in 1815.
November 1944 was gutted by fire again. The shell remains which shows fragments of its classical design. The obelisk at the side of the house had nothing to do with it, it was erected before 'Allerton' was built by occupants of Allerton Hall near by.
Five miles from Liverpool Town Hall, the four sides match up with the compass points. It is riddled with holes, possible from rifle shots.
Sudley House (under restoration).
At Sudley you can see the only Victorian merchant's art collection still held in its original setting. Ship owner and merchant George Holt bought the paintings during the late 19th century. His daughter Emma bequeathed the house and its contents to the city in 1944.
The history of Sudley House begins in the first decade of the 19th century.
Nicholas Robinson, a rich corn merchant, bought the land for £4500. The exact date of the house is unknown, and neither is the architect. Some exterior features suggest it may be the work of Thomas Harrison. He was working on a number of commissions in Liverpool between 1811 and 1815.
Nicholas Robinson was living in Sudley House by 1823 and the building was complete by the following year. Robinson was Mayor of Liverpool in 1828-9 and lived in the house until his death in 1854. His two daughters continued to live there until their own deaths in 1883.
Sudley was then sold to George Holt. He made many alterations to the property. He transferred the main entrance from the eastern to the northern front, creating a garden veranda on the eastern side. He extended the western end, which included building the tower.
Many of the features added since the 1880s can still be seen. The fireplaces, lincrusta wallpapers and oak panelling are still in place. The carved marble fireplace in the dining room bears the Holt family crest. It may have been acquired on one of the family's trips to Italy.
Today Sudley House is one of the few Victorian homes that still has many of its original features intact. It is also the only surviving Victorian merchant art collection in Britain still hanging in its original location.
Sudley House contains fabulous works by Gainsborough, Reynolds, Landseer and Turner, all displayed amongst original Victorian décor. The house itself is surrounded by pleasant gardens and parkland. A visit to Sudley House is a step back in time to an oasis of calm and beauty.
Twighlight Tours of Speke Hall begin this weekend.
Saturday, October 14, and again on Saturday, November 11.
Lisa Downes, house and
collections' manager at Speke, who is organising the event, said: "Tours will be given by costumed guides, who will be telling tales of the darker side of
what life was like at Speke over the years, including religious persecution and the dangers of being a Catholic under a Protestant monarchy, and beliefs,
myths and legends associated with the house."
To add to the atmosphere, musicians in Tudor costume from the Linton Ensemble will play music of the period
in the Great Hall.
There are four Twilight Tours, at 7pm, 7.30pm. 8pm and 8.30pm.
Tickets are £8
including refreshments and must be booked in advance. For details call 0151-427 7231.
Speke Hall Twighlight Tour
I wasn't aloud to take any pictures for security reasons which
was heart wrenching considering the treat that was to come. A tour of the house, our guide was extremely knowledgable and fascinating to listen to and live
music, the musicians dressed in period costume in The Great Hall.
The stories, the priest holes, it was all fantastic and I would recommend a trip and a
tour.
[IMG]h
ttp://static.flickr.com/92/269552930_ded0255d4a.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://static.flickr.com/95/26955
2783_696a40954c.jpg[/IMG]
n
Allerton Tower - The once beautiful Italianate residence off Woolton Rd. Designed in 1847 by Harvey Lonsdale Elmes the Architect
of St. Georges Hall, for Sir Hardman Earle, of the Earle Family, was director of the Liverpool to Manchester Railway and a witness to
Huskisson's fatal accident on its opening day.
Built in 78
acres of grounds, once part of the Manor of Allerton. The main house was unfortunately demolished 1937 and all that remains is what you can see below with
out houses at the
rear:
Bookmarks