NOTES: Buscot was a model village designed by George & Peto for the owner of Buscot Park, Alexander Henderson, a financier, engineer and amateur painter, who was created Baron Faringdon in 1916. The village included cottages, a forge and a community room (parish hall). The village was laid out between 1892-1897.
NOTES: The tomb was designed by Ernest Newton and executed by Laurence Turner and the inscriptions transferred from the earlier tomb that Shaw had erected for his brother some fifty years earlier. The tomb was restored by Cliveden Conservation in 2009.
NOTES: The tomb was designed by Ernest Newton and executed by Laurence Turner and the inscriptions transferred from the earlier tomb that Shaw had erected for his brother some fifty years earlier. The tomb was restored by Cliveden Conservation in 2009.
NOTES: The tomb was designed by Ernest Newton and executed by Laurence Turner and the inscriptions transferred from the earlier tomb that Shaw had erected for his brother some fifty years earlier. The tomb was restored by Cliveden Conservation in 2009.
NOTES: This was an extensive remodelling of a largely late 17th century house, which had been added to in 1880-1881 by the local architect Capel N. Tripp. George & Yeates remodelled the old central portion and added a new south wing, leaving the north wing, tower, dining room, ante-room and billiard room intact.
NOTES: This was an extensive remodelling of a largely late 17th century house, which had been added to in 1880-1881 by the local architect Capel N. Tripp. George & Yeates remodelled the old central portion and added a new south wing, leaving the north wing, tower, dining room, ante-room and billiard room intact.
NOTES: The church of All Saints dates back to the 16th century, but the west wall, timber belfry and spire were rebuilt in 1841-1842 by T. B. Crowest of Billericay, who also inserted the west gallery. The north chapel was rebuilt in 1834 by Roger Talbot of Romford. The church closed in 1973 and was converted into a dwelling by Colin Dollimore of Trevor Dannatt & Partners with Roger Coombs.
NOTES: The church of All Saints dates back to the 16th century, but the west wall, timber belfry and spire were rebuilt in 1841-1842 by T. B. Crowest of Billericay, who also inserted the west gallery. The north chapel was rebuilt in 1834 by Roger Talbot of Romford. The church closed in 1973 and was converted into a dwelling by Colin Dollimore of Trevor Dannatt & Partners with Roger Coombs.
NOTES: This bookplate was used in Voysey's copy of Allan Cunningham, Lives of eminent British painters with an introduction by William Sharp (London, 1886).