chandeliers sundridge

Fall in love with Chandeliers & Mirrors What our customers think Your e-mail to to a friend was successful. Email to a friendSundridge Park Manor is a Grade I listed venue in Bromley designed by John Nash and built in 1797. Set in six acres of tranquil terraced gardens, the Manor is a quiet and beautiful location with a long and colourful history. Only ten miles from London with excellent transport links by rail and road, Sundridge Park Manor can cater for up to 70 guests.  The Manor has 23 en suite bedrooms.  The Manor’s intimate size offers flexibility to accommodate all of your requirements combined with a warm welcome, delicious locally sourced food and spectacular views of parklands. It is the ideal wedding venue, deluxe holiday accommodation with conference rooms in Bromley, Kent, UK. Intricate period features, ornate ceilings and sparkling crystal chandeliers provide a striking backdrop, whether you are looking for for our conference rooms, a fabulous wedding venue, or overnight deluxe holiday accommodation in Bromley, Kent, UK.
Address: Sundridge Manor Park Willoughby Lane off Plaistow Lane Bromley Kent BR1 3FZFaux Elk Shed Antler Pair European Bull Elk Skull Mount Rustic Elk 18 Antler Chandelier with 21 Lights Rustic Moose 10 Antler Chandelier with 9 Lights Solar Comfort 1500 With Remote control and High/Med/Low settings Tripod Infrared Heater Stand Rustic Whitetail 12 Antler Cascade Chandelierchandelier orthodoxe Infrared Wall Mounted Patio Heaterarctic pear chandelier priceSundridge Park Manor  -chandeliers breyer Plaistow Lane, Bromley, Greater London, BR1 3TP [ Telephone not available ] Be the first to Write a Review! Been to Sundridge Park Manor? Hotels in Bromley  | B&Bs in Bromley  |
Hotels close to central Bromley  | Luxury Hotels in Bromley  | Budget Hotels in Bromley Hotels in Bromley with Disabled access  | Pet friendly hotels in Bromley  | Hotels in Bromley near golf courses  |Hotels with Wi-Fi in Bromley Residential Interior Design Studio based in London 38 Photos and videosViewing Tweets won't unblock @SundridgeDesign.Sundridge, is a village and a parish in Sevenoaks district, Kent, and is ecclesiastically in the diocese of Canterbury, in the peculiar of Shoreham, deanery of Shoreham.  The church is named St. Mary the Virgin with original parish registers commencing 1562.  The parish is, today, in the Diocese of Rochester, in the deanery of Sevenoaks. The village stands 3-1/4 miles West-Southwest of Sevenoaks railway station. It has a post-office under Sevenoaks; and gives the title of Baron to the Duke of Argyle. The parish contains Sevenoaks workhouse, includes most of Idehill chapelry, and comprises 4,041 acres.
Population in 1851, 1,642; in 1861, 1,495, - of whom 25 were in the workhouse. The manor belongs to Lord Amherst. There are several good residences and a paper mill. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Canterbury since at least the time of Doomsday Book. Value, £815, with a habitable glebe house. Successive Archbishops have continued to endow the church's structure and furnishings. The church is mainly later English and is a fine example of a thirteenth-century rebuild of an earlier building, consisting of a west tower, aisled nave with eastern chapel and a chancel. The thirteenth-century aisles were originally lean-to constructions but were closed in and roofed during the fifteenth century. The clerestory windows that had lit the nave became redundant at the time of the aisles' enclosure though it may still be seen. There is a fine chandelier dated 1726, given by a cousin of the then Archbishop. In the eighteenth century the church received an additional family of benefactors, the Campbells, who lived at Combe Bank (now a school).
Two female members of the family are commemorated by marble busts in the chancel. The nave displays five funeral hatchments. The west window of the south aisle depicting the Annunciation is by Kempe, whilst the splendid reredos of painted Caen stone (which cost £190 in 1877) is by the Royal Academician James Forsythe. The churchyard contains the tomb of Bishop Porteus. There are a Wesleyan chapel, two national schools, and charities worth £7. Publisher: Kent, England: Kent Archaeological Society, various dates.  [:  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 (1876), 11, 12, 13 (1880), 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 32, 34, 35, vol. 1907 supplement.] Great Britain, Public Record Office. 'Calendar of the patent rolls preserved in the Public Record Office--Edward II, Vol. 1. 1307-1313'Each volume has own index. Publisher: Genealogical Society of Utah d.b.a Historical Books on FamilySearch; 'Inquisitions and assessments relating to feudal aids : with other analogous documents preserved in the Public Record Office, A. D. 1284-1431', Vol. 3.
'The book of fees commonly called testa de nevill, pt. 3'. The Book of fees contains information about the holdings of feudal tenants. 'The Red book of the Exchequer - Liber rubeus de Scaccario, Vol. 3'. The Red book of the Exchequer was a register intended to preserve important documents comprising charters, statutes of the realm, public acts (Placita), private deeds and ordinances, correspondence. 'Administrations in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Vol. 1. 1559-1571'. Publisher: Genealogical Society of Utah d.b.a Historical Books on FamilySearch; 'The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent; Containing the antient and present state of it, civil and ecclesiastical; collected from public records, and other authorities: illustrated with maps, views, antiquities, etc. The second edition, improved, corrected, and continued to the present time'. Publisher: Canterbury: Printed by W. Bristow, 1797-1801. URL: British History Online'Notes on the churches in the counties of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey, mentioned in Domesday book, and those of more recent date'.