Robin Hood House (Little Gaddesden): Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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* [http://maps.nls.uk/view/101568737#zoom=4&lat=4651&lon=4189&layers=BT 6" O.S. map ''Bedfordshire'' XXXIV.SW (1950; rev. 1946).]
* [http://maps.nls.uk/view/101568737#zoom=4&lat=4651&lon=4189&layers=BT 6" O.S. map ''Bedfordshire'' XXXIV.SW (1950; rev. 1946).]


=== Background ===
== Background ==
* [http://www.benslow-care-homes.co.uk/care_home/robin-hood-house Benslow Care Homes: Robin Hood House]
* [http://www.benslow-care-homes.co.uk/care_home/robin-hood-house Benslow Care Homes: Robin Hood House]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Gaddesden Wikipedia: Little Gaddesden.]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Gaddesden Wikipedia: Little Gaddesden.]

Revision as of 14:46, 12 July 2018

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Robin Hood House.
Robin Hood House, once an inn – the Robin Hood – then a private residence, now a privately owned and run dementia care home / Benslow Care Homes: Robin Hood House.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-25. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-07-12.

Robin Hood House was originally a village pub, the Robin Hood, but was subsequently converted into a private residence and greatly expanded. It now functions as a dementia care home, owned and run by Benslow Care Homes.

As can be seen on the Google map of the county on the page on Hertfordshire place-names, Robin Hood House is just outside the historical Hertford­shire/Bucking­ham­shire border according to the boundary data provided by the Historic Counties Trust. I follow the Victoria County History which includes it in Hertfordshire (1908).[1] It is certainly now in Hertfordshire.[2]

Quotations

[1908:]
Following the high road north from Hemel Hempstead may be seen near the beginning of the village Robin Hood House, a large old house of timber and stucco. It was once the Robin Hood village public-house, but has been greatly added to, and is now the residence of Mr. Alexander Murray-Smith.[3]

[1911:]
Robin Hood House, originally an inn, stands at the end of the village, ¾ mile S. of the church. It is a two-storeyed building with attics, and is covered with cement; the roofs are tiled. It is probably of the 17th century, but the only old features now visible are some beams in the ceilings and some flat, shaped balusters in a staircase leading from the first floor to the attics.
   Condition—Good.[4]

Gazetteers

Sources

Maps

Background

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Notes

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