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  2. Chiswick House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiswick_House

    Chiswick House is a Neo-Palladian style villa in the Chiswick district of London, England. A "glorious" [ 1 ] example of Neo-Palladian architecture in west London , the house was designed and built by Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington (1694–1753), and completed in 1729.

  3. Chiswick Asylum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiswick_Asylum

    Chiswick Asylum was an English asylum established by Edward Francis Tuke and his wife Mary as Manor House Asylum in Chiswick, in about 1837. It was continued by his son, Thomas Harrington Tuke (1826-1888), before moving to Chiswick House in 1892 and becoming the Chiswick House Asylum , where it was run by two of Thomas Tuke's sons.

  4. Edward Fawcett (conservationist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Fawcett...

    After his retirement he continued with the management of the Osterley Park and House, and, concerned about the neglect of Chiswick House Grounds, in 1984 he became the first chairman of Chiswick House Friends; [2] they commissioned a bench in his memory. [11] He served on committees of the International Council on Monuments and Sites. [1]

  5. David Jacques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Jacques

    David Lawson Jacques PhD OBE is a British garden historian.He specializes in landscape conservation and the history of 17th and 18th century gardens. [1] He was prominent in the campaign to have cultural landscapes admitted to the World Heritage List in 1992, and served on the ICOMOS World Heritage Panel 2020-1 and 2022-3.

  6. Architecture of Chiswick House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Chiswick_House

    Lord Burlington was not just restricted to the influence of Andrea Palladio as his library list at Chiswick indicates. He owned books by influential Italian Renaissance architects such as Sebastiano Serlio and Leon Battista Alberti and his library contained books by French architects, sculptors, illustrators and architectural theorists such as Jean Cotelle, Philibert de l'Orme, Abraham Bosse ...

  7. Gertrude Helena Bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gertrude_Helena_Bone

    Gertrude Bone, like her father, was a "staunch Methodist": Stephen Bone remembered his childhood as one in which "presents, entertaining, and alcohol were banished; pencil and paper for drawing were deemed sufficient diversion at the house." [4] In 1913, the family moved from Chiswick to Byways, Steep, near Petersfield. [4]

  8. Charles Whittingham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Whittingham

    Whittingham inaugurated the idea of printing cheap, handy editions of standard authors, and, on the bookselling trade threatening not to sell his productions, took a room at a coffee house and sold them by auction himself. [1] In 1809, he started a paper-pulp factory at Chiswick, near London, and in 1811 founded the Chiswick Press.

  9. Treasure Houses of Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasure_Houses_of_Britain

    A formal garden she has built reflects the architectural plan of Chiswick House, which was designed by Lord Burlington and William Kent. [ 27 ] J. Carter Brown , director of the National Gallery of Art , which hosted the "Treasure Houses of Britain" exhibition in Washington, D.C., pronounced Chatsworth a "work of art" in the way it "sits in its ...