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2006.5350

2006.5350
2006.5350
2006.5350
2006.5350
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2045
"The Nunnery Ruins, St Albans."
2006.5350
Social History (Museum of St Albans)
  • Postcards
2006.5350
Monochrome postcard showing showing Sopwell Nunnery ruins, St Albans. Postmarked Welwyn, July 17th 1908. NB. This negative appears to have been printed the wrong way round, and the caption applied when it was a print. These are not the ruins of Sopwell Nunnery, but the remains of a house built on that site by Sir Richard Lee, who was Henry VIII’s military surveyor and a very wealthy man. He was granted the nunnery and its lands after the Dissolution. Queen Elizabeth I stayed there in 1564. The house is built of brick and flint and Totternhoe clunch, a soft local chalky stone, probably recycled from the nunnery buildings. Old London Road and Sopwell Lane became the main route to London when Sir Richard diverted the original road which passed too close to his house. In the late 17th century the house was sold to the Grimston family who by then owned Gorhambury, and they used materials from the house for building works at Gorhambury.
Written
  • postcard
  • Boots Cash Chemists
1908
  • Edwardian (1901 - 1914)
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2016-02-29 22:36:48
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