EAW005542 ENGLAND (1947). Little Horwood Manor, Manor Farm and surrounding countryside, Little Horwood, 1947

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (26)

EAW005542
  0° 0m
EAW008229
  213° 31m
EAW005539
  311° 54m
EAW005540
  320° 75m
EAW005537
  290° 86m
EAW011451
  48° 99m
EAW008232
  76° 100m
EAW008227
  150° 107m
EAW005536
  345° 109m
EAW008231
  188° 110m
EAW005541
  279° 113m
EAW008230
  112° 122m
EAW016601
  84° 125m
EAW011448
  55° 131m
EAW016597
  77° 131m
EAW011446
  71° 132m
EAW011449
  72° 132m
EAW008236
  257° 142m
EAW016599
  76° 143m
EAW011447
  43° 147m
EAW011450
  59° 156m
EAW008235
  191° 165m
EAW005538
  252° 168m
EAW005535
  307° 181m
EAW008233
  206° 206m
EAW016598
  48° 309m

Details

Title [EAW005542] Little Horwood Manor, Manor Farm and surrounding countryside, Little Horwood, 1947
Reference EAW005542
Date 17-May-1947
Link
Place name LITTLE HORWOOD
Parish LITTLE HORWOOD
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 479136, 231582
Longitude / Latitude -0.84773372707082, 51.976633792188
National Grid Reference SP791316

Pins

Part of the dispersed accommodation/admin buildings for the 2ndWW RAF Little Horwood.

redmist
Thursday 11th of November 2021 09:41:06 PM
Shucklow Hill (road name)

totoro
Sunday 30th of November 2014 03:24:52 PM

totoro
Sunday 30th of November 2014 03:10:37 PM
Stables at Little Horwood Manor, Little Horwood Grade 2 listed - English Heritage Building ID: 503774 Stables range of 1938-39 by A S G Butler for Little Horwood Manor, a hunting box. After 1984 the stables were subdivided and converted to four residential units. Despite the subdivision and residential conversion the stables survives little altered on its main external facades.

totoro
Sunday 30th of November 2014 03:03:32 PM
Little Horwood Manor, with West Wing Service Buildings, Gardener's Cottage, and Garden Walls and Gat, Little Horwood (MK17 0PU) Grade 2 listed premises- English Heritage Building ID: 503417 Horwood Manor was commissioned in 1938 by George Gee, an industrialist and partner in Gee Walker Slater (GWS), a major engineering and building firm. The architect was A S G Butler. It was supposedly intended to be used as a hunting box, Gee being a keen supporter of the Whaddon Chase Hunt It has a butterfly plan, and is built of a dark buff brick with stone detailing (some of it eccentrically placed in a way that is hard to explain) and tiled roofs, reinforced steel joists are used to support the ground floor, and possibly in other elements of its construction. Flanking walls lead from the end towers to two-storey pavilions (each now a separate residence), one a former garage and the other once the gardener's cottage. A short service range, mainly single-storey garages (that behind the western pavilion converted to a house in the 1980s) and a former lavatory block (also converted for domestic use) extends the west range beyond the former garage. The house was apparently never used by Gee and during the war it was requisitioned by the government. Various stories relate to this period in the house's history when it reputedly served as an out-station to Bletchley Park. After the war the building was sold, and remained mothballed until 1984 when it was subdivided into five main freehold properties; the stables were similarly subdivided and converted to four residential units.

totoro
Sunday 30th of November 2014 02:44:21 PM