Gadebridge House was a country house at Gadebridge in Hertfordshire.
History
editThe house was built for Sir Astley Paston Cooper, a surgeon, who moved there in 1811.[1] In around 1840 Cooper commissioned an iron bridge as part of the approach to the site.[2] The house was inherited by Lionel Hervey-Bathurst in 1905, following the death of the 3rd Baronet.[3] The house passed down the Paston-Cooper family until it became Gadebridge Park School in 1914.[1] Although the site accommodated a temporary army camp during World War I, the house remained a school until 1963 when the school was forced out of its premises by the Commission for New Towns as part of its development of the new town.[4] The house was demolished and Kodak built a Marketing Education Centre on the site: the centre was itself demolished in 1995 and the site is now used for housing.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c "Gadebridge House, Hemel Hempstead". Hertfordshire Genealogy. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
- ^ "Attractions". Dacroum Borough Council. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
- ^ Walford, Edward (January 1860). The county families of the United Kingdom. Dalcassian Publishing Company. pp. 301–2.
- ^ "Gadebridge House/School". Hemel Today, The Gazette. 2 January 2010. Retrieved 10 August 2013.[permanent dead link ]