Henbury, Dorset
Henbury House is a classical Georgian house built in 1770. In the 19th century the estate was held by the Parke family. In the 1870s two members of the family emigrated to Australia and founded Henbury Station, a cattle station some 140 km south of Alice Springs, near where the Henbury Crater was discovered in 1899.
Henbury House (renamed Henbury Hall) was the subject of a failed holiday time-share scheme in the 1980s which was designed to cover the cost of its refurbishment. In 1982 the then owners Charles and Susan Maitland offered bonds for sale at £500 each, guaranteeing investors a week's family holiday a year in the house for five years. This was followed by a second Bond issue in 1983 at £1500. However, the venture failed during 1984 and in 1985 the property was sold to Roy and Guy Baylis. The Maitlands filed for bankruptcy which was completed in 1988 with a dividend of 24 pence in the pound for creditors. A private housing development called Henbury House Gardens was then built on the land surrounding the house.
References
- ^ "East Dorset County Council: Areas of Great Landscape Vale (June 1997)".
- ^ "HENBURY HALL, DORSET". Archived from the original on 4 February 2019.
- ^ London Gazette, 7 January 1988, p 181
- ^ "HENBURY HOUSE GARDENS RESIDENTS ASSOCIATION LIMITED people - Find and update company information - GOV.UK". find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk.
External links
Media related to Henbury, Dorset at Wikimedia Commons