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|ownership=The Hertfordshire Golf and Country Club
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'''Broxbournebury Manor''' is a country house, now serving as a golf and country club, in [[Hertfordshire]].  It is a Grade II listed building.<ref name=nhle>{{NHLE|1348380|Broxbournebury School}}</ref> It was originally a courtyard house built in the 16th Century with major alterations and additions in the 18th and 19th Centuries. Today it is a country club.
'''Broxbournebury Manor''' is a country house, now serving as a golf and country club, in [[Hertfordshire]].  It is a Grade II listed building.<ref name=nhle>{{NHLE|1348380|Broxbournebury School}}</ref> It was originally a courtyard house built in the 16th Century with major alterations and additions in the 18th and 19th Centuries. Today it is a country club.

Latest revision as of 22:06, 8 October 2019

Broxbournebury Manor
Hertfordshire

Broxbournebury Manor
Location
Grid reference: TL35360718
Location: 51°44’49"N, 0°2’26"W
History
For: John Cocke (or Sir Henry Cocke)
Country house
Information
Owned by: The Hertfordshire Golf and Country Club
Website: https://thgcc.co.uk

Broxbournebury Manor is a country house, now serving as a golf and country club, in Hertfordshire. It is a Grade II listed building.[1] It was originally a courtyard house built in the 16th Century with major alterations and additions in the 18th and 19th Centuries. Today it is a country club.

The Cocke family

The Cocke family built Broxbournebury Manor in about 1550. It is not certain whether it was John Cocke or his son Sir Henry Cocke (1538-1609) who built it. John Cocke (1506-1557) was granted the Broxbourne Manor by Henry VIII in 1544. John died in 1557 and left the property to his wife Anne and when she died she left it to her son Sir Henry Cocke.[2] He was a person of importance in the household of Queen Elizabeth.

Jacob Bosanquet bought the house at the time of his marriage in 1790 t.[3] When Jacob died in 1828 his eldest son George inherited the house. In 1831 he married his cousin Cecilia Franks (1789-1868) She was a keen gardener and her rose garden was often mentioned in publications. One book described Broxbournebury as a “celebrated mansion and remarkable for a unique rose garden”.[4] In 1832 a rose called “Mrs Bosanquet” was named after her. This rose still exists today.[5]

The couple had one daughter, Cecilia. When George died in 1866 his daughter and her husband Horace James Smith inherited the house. Horace added the name Bosanquet to his name at the time of the inheritance.

Advertisement for the sale of the estate in 1946

In 1878, Horace Smith commissioned Sir Ernest George to make considerable alterations and additions to the house.[1]

The house and some of the land was bought by Hertfordshire County Council in 1946. The Broxbournebury School, a special schoo, operated here until 1990.[6] It was sold later to become the Hertfordshire Golf and Country Club.

Outside links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 National Heritage List 1348380: Broxbournebury School
  2. Broxbournebury
  3. Foster Joseph 1884 “The royal lineage of our noble and gentle families”, p. 25. Online reference
  4. Protestant Exiles from France in the Reign of Louis XIV”, p. 245. Online reference
  5. Help me find website. Online reference
  6. Broxbournebury School record on AllSchoolsAndCollegesUK