The Castle Inn, Hill Street.
The Castle Inn is not a name you would associate with Richmond today but it was a leading hotel and
The Castle Inn is not a name you would associate with Richmond today but it was a leading hotel and
The Grade II listed building, constructed in 1856 according to the designs of Henry Laxton, showcases the elegant Italian Campanile
No one knows the age of this fish marker stone. It was probably used to denote a fare point for
Residence of the Duke of Northumberland. This house was built in 1547 on the site of the Carthusian monastery of
Built on the site of the Brewhouse for the old Richmond Palace. It was a Summer Residence of Sir Charles Asgill 1st Baronet, a self-made banker who served as Lord Mayor of London in 1761. The same year work began on Richmond Place as it was then known.
In 1639, a slice of Richmond Hill’s verdant expanse, nestled between the commons of Richmond and Petersham, found its custodian
The Castle Inn is not a name you would associate with Richmond today but it was a leading hotel and
No one knows the age of this fish marker stone. It was probably used to denote a fare point for
In 1639, a slice of Richmond Hill’s verdant expanse, nestled between the commons of Richmond and Petersham, found its custodian
When staying at Richmond Palace Queen Elizabeth I, according to one of her earliest biographers, Edmund Bohan, was always the
Difficult to precisely date this but I would guess by the clothes and cars that this photograph was taken in
Like the Bakewell Tart or Eccles Cake, Richmond has its historical food fair. Taking its name not from the town
This postcard was posted on November 23rd 1909. I shows Terrace Gardens in the snow (Please see recent shot of
This early Georgian terrace built in 1724 for Caroline, Queen to George II. Caroline was a popular benevolent monarch who
Saturday home to Duck Pond market. The original 1850 building housed the Palm Court Hotel which had incorporated the riverside