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The Italian Garden with balustrade around the lilypond at the Gardens of Easton Lodge - Credit: The Gardens of Easton Lodge The Gardens of Easton Lodge at Little Easton near Great Dunmow will be open for pre-booked visitors on Sunday, May 23. The work to restore the balustrade around the Italian Garden s lilypond should be complete. The Countess of Warwick with her dogs. In 1902 the Countess commissioned Harold Peto to redesign her Gardens at Little Easton near Great Dunmow - Credit: The Gardens of Easton Lodge, at Little Easton near Great Dunmow A storyteller will be on hand to talk about the Countess of Warwick, who loved animals. She had a mini-zoo at her other home, Warwick Castle, she became a dog-breeder and loved birds. ....
Find out when Forgotten Gardens of Easton Lodge open again | Braintree and Witham Times braintreeandwithamtimes.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from braintreeandwithamtimes.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Find out when Forgotten Gardens of Easton Lodge open again | Maldon and Burnham Standard maldonandburnhamstandard.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from maldonandburnhamstandard.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Gardens of Easton Lodge at Little Easton near Great Dunmow - Credit: The Gardens of Easton Lodge Coronavirus restrictions are set to lift, offering a chance to get out and about for the first time in ages. At The Gardens of Easton Lodge, the first Open Day of 2021 takes place on Sunday, April 18. Tickets must be booked in advance and are now on sale. Visitors can enjoy a stroll around the gardens and a climb up into the treehouse. The latest wave of Spring flowers should include cowslips, bluebells and tulips, following on from the last of the daffodils, primroses and violets. ....
Last modified on Tue 9 Mar 2021 08.55 EST Tyne and Wear For millions of readers around the world, the image of the country between the mouths of the rivers Tyne and Wear was woven by Catherine Cookson, the region’s most prolific and popular author. Cookson’s was a landscape of collieries, shipyards, rumbling coal trains, sooty-faced kids and the instantly nostalgic tones of pithead silver bands playing Haydn. While fragments of her world remain – mainly in the doughty cheerfulness of the locals – over the past four decades, as heavy industry has receded, a more distant past has emerged. Twelve centuries before Dame Catherine began her career, the north-east’s first great literary figure, the Venerable Bede, was busy writing the histories that would help forge an English identity. Saint Bede (whose story is brought to life at the excellent Jarrow Hall Anglo-Saxon Village) divided his time between the twin monasteries of Saint Paul’s in Jarrow and Saint Peter ....