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Cromer Hall is a country house located one mile south of Cromer on Holt Road, [1] in the English county of Norfolk. [2] The present house was built in 1829 [ 3 ] by architect William Donthorne . The hall is a Grade II* listed building.
Today, the hotel which occupies an elevated location overlooking the town's pier still provides accommodation to visitors. [28] Other notable hotels include the 17th century Red Lion Hotel, the Victorian Sandcliff Hotel and the Edwardian Cliftonville Hotel. Cromer Hall is located to the south of the town
The town hall was then acquired by a property developer and let to the Co-op in 1991, before being restored with funding from English Heritage in 1994. [14] In the early 21st century, it was occupied by a firm of solicitors, [ 15 ] and, in September 2020, it re-opened as a shop known as "Harbord's Artisan Vintage Emporium".
The Cromer Campus of the Northern Beaches Secondary College is a government-funded co-educational comprehensive secondary day school, located in Cromer, a suburb on the Northern Beaches of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Established in 1976 as Cromer High School, the campus caters for approximately 1072 students from Year 7 to Year 12.
Cromer Hall; D. Ditchingham Hall; Dunston Hall Hotel; E. Earlham Hall; Earsham Hall; East Barsham Manor; ... This page was last edited on 1 April 2018, at 20:35 (UTC).
He was a generous benefactor to Cromer in Norfolk where he had his country house, Cromer Hall: he paid for a lifeboat (named after him) [1] and donated land for a cemetery. He was a freemason , serving as a trustee of the Royal Masonic Institution and as provincial grand master of Norfolk.
Other notable historic buildings include Pound Farm House, built in 1675 on The Street/Halls Corner, The Free School (Old School House) built by John Hall in 1726 on the Cromer Road, Avenue Farm House, built in 1835, and Hevingham Primary School, built in 1875 with a capacity of 100 students (currently 98 enrolled).
The Hall was leased to Thomas Tapping and his wife Bessie, who opened the private Beeston Hall School in 1948. In 1967 the school became an incorporated trust, and in 1970, following the death of Robert Wyndham Ketton-Cremer , the last squire of Felbrigg, the school acquired the freehold and about 14 acres (5.7 ha) of land.