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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Horsley_Towers
rdf:type
dbo:Location schema:LandmarksOrHistoricalBuildings schema:Place geo:SpatialThing dbo:HistoricPlace owl:Thing dbo:Place
rdfs:label
Horsley Towers
rdfs:comment
Horsley Towers, East Horsley, Surrey, England is a country house dating from the 19th century. The house was designed by Charles Barry for the banker William Currie. The East Horsley estate was later sold to William King-Noel, 1st Earl of Lovelace who undertook two major expansions of the house to his own designs. Lovelace lived at the Towers with his wife, Ada, daughter of Lord Byron, a pioneering mathematician, friend of Charles Babbage and described as among the first computer programmers. In 1919, the Towers was purchased by Thomas Sopwith, the aviator and businessman, who named his plane, the Hawker Horsley, after his home. Now a wedding and conference venue, Horsley Towers is a Grade II* listed building.
foaf:name
Horsley Towers
dbp:name
Horsley Towers
geo:lat
51.26539993286133
geo:long
-0.4271999895572662
foaf:depiction
n16:Former_Gatehouse_to_Horsley_Towers_-_geograph.org.uk_-_438854.jpg n16:Horsley_Towers_entrance.jpg n16:Horsley_Towers_from_the_lake.jpg n16:Horsley_Towers_over_the_Meadow_-_geograph.org.uk_-_438820.jpg n16:Horsley_Towers_across_the_lawn.jpg
dbo:location
dbr:Surrey dbr:East_Horsley
dct:subject
dbc:Grade_II*_listed_houses dbc:Country_houses_in_Surrey dbc:Grade_II*_listed_buildings_in_Surrey
dbo:wikiPageID
64210908
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1088896176
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Mark_Girouard dbr:Charles_Barry dbr:Romanesque_Revival_architecture_in_the_United_Kingdom dbr:Ockham,_Surrey dbr:William_King-Noel,_1st_Earl_of_Lovelace dbr:Disneyland dbr:Charles_Babbage dbr:Kitchen_garden dbr:Polychrome_brickwork dbr:Pevsner_Architectural_Guides dbr:John_Julius_Norwich dbr:Country_house dbr:Thomas_Sopwith dbr:Georgian_architecture dbr:Surrey dbr:Lord_Byron dbr:Electricity_Council dbr:Cloister dbr:Bastions dbr:Victorian_Web dbr:Nikolaus_Pevsner dbr:Gatehouse dbr:Victorian_era dbr:William_Currie_(British_politician) dbr:Listed_building dbr:Ada_Lovelace dbr:Ian_Nairn dbr:Lord_Lieutenant_of_Surrey dbr:Tudor_Revival_architecture dbr:Flint dbr:De_Vere_(hotel_operator) dbr:Rhineland dbc:Grade_II*_listed_buildings_in_Surrey dbr:World_War_II dbr:Lovelace_Bridges dbr:East_Horsley dbc:Grade_II*_listed_houses dbr:Hawker_Horsley dbr:Mechanical_computer dbc:Country_houses_in_Surrey
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n15:+Surrey n17:568583334%3Freferer=br&ht=edition n19:victoriancountry0000giro
owl:sameAs
n10:i5ND wikidata:Q17547538
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Coord dbt:Use_dmy_dates dbt:Cite_book dbt:Notes dbt:Infobox_historic_site dbt:Reflist dbt:Sfn dbt:Efn
dbo:thumbnail
n16:Horsley_Towers_from_the_lake.jpg?width=300
dbp:designation2Date
1985-11-25
dbp:designation2Number
1029424
dbp:designation2Offname
Entrance Walls, Gardeners Cottage and Horsley Towers Cottage
dbp:architect
dbr:Charles_Barry dbr:William_King-Noel,_1st_Earl_of_Lovelace
dbp:architecture
dbr:Tudor_Revival_architecture dbr:Romanesque_Revival_architecture_in_the_United_Kingdom
dbp:built
18341855
dbp:caption
Horsley Towers seen across the lake
dbp:designation
Grade II listed building Grade II*
dbp:designation1Date
1967-06-14
dbp:designation1Number
1294810
dbp:designation1Offname
Horsley Towers
dbp:governingBody
dbr:De_Vere_(hotel_operator)
dbp:location
dbr:East_Horsley dbr:Surrey
dbp:locmapin
Surrey
dbp:type
House
georss:point
51.2654 -0.4272
dbo:abstract
Horsley Towers, East Horsley, Surrey, England is a country house dating from the 19th century. The house was designed by Charles Barry for the banker William Currie. The East Horsley estate was later sold to William King-Noel, 1st Earl of Lovelace who undertook two major expansions of the house to his own designs. Lovelace lived at the Towers with his wife, Ada, daughter of Lord Byron, a pioneering mathematician, friend of Charles Babbage and described as among the first computer programmers. In 1919, the Towers was purchased by Thomas Sopwith, the aviator and businessman, who named his plane, the Hawker Horsley, after his home. Now a wedding and conference venue, Horsley Towers is a Grade II* listed building.
dbp:designation3Date
1985-11-25
dbp:designation3Number
1029425
dbp:designation3Offname
Pavilion 100 yards northwest of cloisters of Horsley Towers
dbp:designation4Date
1985-11-25
dbp:designation4Number
1188298
dbp:designation4Offname
Wall and Pavilion 300 yards southwest of Horsley Towers
dbp:designation5Date
1985-11-25
dbp:designation5Number
1377818
dbp:designation5Offname
Walls to former kitchen garden of Horsley Towers
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Horsley_Towers?oldid=1088896176&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
12950
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Horsley_Towers
geo:geometry
POINT(-0.42719998955727 51.265399932861)