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  1. Bagshot Park. The Duke of Connaught, one of Queen Victoria’s sons, had Bagshot Park commissioned by the architect Benjamin Ferrey who was a pupil of both AWN Pugin and of William Wilkins.

    • Location, Area, Boundaries, Landform and Setting
    • Entrances and Approaches
    • Principal Building
    • Gardens and Pleasure Grounds
    • Park
    • Kitchen Garden

    Bagshot Park lies 1km to the north of the town of Bagshot which it adjoins to the south, on the west side of the A30, London Road, which forms the eastern boundary of the site, separating it off from the northern part of Bagshot. To the west the boundary lies within an area of woodland, Queen's Wood, which continues westwards to Vicarage Lane, beyo...

    Themain entrance lies off London Road, 550m south-east of the house. Here stands a lodge, Sunningdale Lodge, and accompanying gates, its architecture reflecting that of the main house. A drive from this point leads through plantings of mature trees and rhododendrons, then more open lawns, westwards for 300m before dividing. The southern branch prov...

    Bagshot Park house (listed grade II) stands towards the north of its park, surrounded by pleasure grounds which lie in an arc from north-west through north to south-east, and with the main area of formal gardens to the south. The house wasbuilt in 1877 byBenjamin Ferrey for the Duke of Connaught. It is in Tudor Gothic style, built of bright red bri...

    Along the south front is a walk beyond which are two terraces, built projecting out into the earlier parkland in the 1870s to accompany the new house. A pair of steps, the western flight extending the axis of the walk across the west front, lead down a grass bank to the second level which is laid out as a semicircular parterre, planted in box with ...

    The park lies to the south of the house between the formal gardens andQueen's Wood. It is now (1998) primarily in agricultural use. Some 700m to the south of Bagshot Park house is a pool formed from the damming of Windle Brook which runs from north-west to south-east through the eastern edge of Queen's Wood. Stone Bridge, which crosses the dam on t...

    The brick-walled kitchen gardenlies just off London Road, 500m to the south-east of the mansion and 150m east of the home farm. It is probably of C18 origin, but the walls have been much repaired since this date. To the north of the walled enclosure stands the gardeners' bothy and east of this the head gardener's house, both buildings being of the ...

    • Bagshot Park, Bagshot
    • England, Surrey
    • Woking
    • GU19 5PJ
  2. bagshotvillage.org.uk › bparkBagshot Park

    Bagshot Park . There has been a Royal hunting lodge on the site now known as Bagshot Park for many centuries: it was well favoured by the Stuart kings. Later it was used by various officers of the Royal household. Bagshot Park again became a Royal residence in the 19th century.

  3. Bagshot Park is a royal residence located near Bagshot, a village 11 miles south of Windsor. It is on Bagshot Heath, a 50-square-mile tract of formerly open land in Surrey and Berkshire. Overview. Map. Directions.

  4. Dec 19, 2020 · Bagshot Park is a royal residence which is located near the village of Bagshot in Surrey. It is approximately 11 miles south of Windsor. The 51-acres occupied by this Grade II listed building...

  5. Bagshot Park (Grid reference: SU 9164) is a royal residence. It is 11 miles (18 km) south of Windsor. It is located in Bagshot, Surrey, and is the current home and official residence of Prince Edward, the Earl of Wessex and Sophie, Countess of Wessex.

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  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BagshotBagshot - Wikipedia

    Bagshot Park, home of Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh is located on the northern edge of the village. The A30 leaving Bagshot to the southwest for Camberley has a large roundabout on it called the Jolly Farmer after a public house that used to stand in its centre, now used as a Golfing Store.

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