Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Annals of an Old Manor House: Sutton Place, Guildford. London, 1899 (The author's family held the lease of Sutton Place and resided there from 1874 to post 1899)archive.org on-line text; Victoria County History, Surrey, vol.3, 1911, Woking parish, Sutton Manor, pp.381-390; Sutton Place, notes by Philip Arnold
Sutton Square is the cul-de-sac at the end of East 58th Street, just east of Sutton Place; Riverview Terrace is a row of townhouses on a short private driveway that runs north from Sutton Square. History
Sutton Place, Manhattan, a neighborhood in New York City York Avenue and Sutton Place , the street for which the neighborhood is named Topics referred to by the same term
Sutton Place, is a small street in the London Borough of Hackney. It links Homerton High Street with St John's Church Gardens, in Hackney . The Georgian terrace of 1790–1806, is Grade II listed as a whole, together with the villas on the north side of the street which date from 1820, and is sited in the conservation area around the gardens of ...
Sutton House Building B 2-9 Floorplan.png 1,359 × 922; 854 KB Sutton House Building B 10-11 Floorplan.png 1,222 × 947; 1.06 MB Sutton House Building B 12 Floorplan.png 1,045 × 815; 837 KB
[70] Created by artists Gary Drostle and Rob Turner, the mosaic was made from vitreous ceramic tesserae (small tiles made of glass and clay), and put in place in 1994. [23] It was designed by Rob Turner, and shows several aspects of Sutton's heritage and local history. The centre-piece is the depiction of Henry VIII's palace at Nonsuch. [71]
In 1990, Koch bought Sutton Place near Guildford, Surrey, England. [13] Sutton Place is the former residence of J. Paul Getty and the meeting place of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. Koch purchased the property from another reclusive art collector, Stanley J. Seeger. [14]
One Sutton Place South is a 14-story, 42-unit cooperative apartment house in the East Midtown neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, overlooking the East River on Sutton Place between 56th and 57th Streets. One Sutton Place South contains the residences of diplomats, titans of industry, and media executives.