Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Hamilton Palace from the north-west by Thomas Annan. Hamilton Palace was a country house in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland.It was the seat of the Dukes of Hamilton and is widely acknowledged as having been one of the grandest houses in the British Isles. [1]
Hamilton_Palace,_Framfield_(geograph_4427254).jpg (640 × 398 pixels, file size: 152 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Hamilton family are major land-owners in the area to this day. Hamilton Palace was the seat of the Dukes of Hamilton until the early-twentieth century. [4] Other historic buildings in the area include Hamilton Old Parish Church, a Georgian era building completed in 1734 and the only church to have been built by William Adam. [4]
View of Hamilton Palace, 2015. On the site of the former High Cross House, a former nursing home destroyed by a fire of unknown cause, [20] van Hoogstraten began constructing a private mansion he called Hamilton Palace, at Palehouse Common near Uckfield in East Sussex in the mid-1980s. [5]
Hamilton Palace in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, had been the family's seat from the 13th century. Built by Duchess Anne and her husband, William Douglas, 3rd Duke of Hamilton , it had the distinction of being one of the largest non-royal palaces in Europe, reaching its greatest extent under the 10th and 11th dukes in the mid nineteenth century.
Chatelherault Country Park is a country park in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland. [1] It is located in the village of Ferniegair, 1 + 1 ⁄ 4 miles (2 kilometres) from Hamilton town centre. On the west side of the park, runs the Avon, a tributary of the River Clyde.
Now the solitary remaining testament to the colossal scale and grandeur of the buildings which once stood in Hamilton Low Parks, Hamilton Palace Mausoleum is a Roman-style domed structure of panelled masonry. Standing to an overall height of about 123 feet (37 m), it occupies a site some 650 feet (200 m) north of the site of Hamilton Palace.
Bothwellhaugh was a Scottish coal mining village, which housed Hamilton Palace Colliery workers and their families. Locals referred to the village as The Pailis, and it was located near the towns of Motherwell, Bellshill and Hamilton, in Lanarkshire. The village was occupied from the mid-1880s, until it was demolished in 1965. [1]