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Escowbeck

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Escowbeck
Escowbeck House 2008
Escowbeck is located in the City of Lancaster district
Escowbeck
Location within the City of Lancaster district
General information
Architectural styleGeorgian
Town or cityQuernmore
CountryEngland
Coordinates54°04′19″N2°43′30″W/ 54.072°N 2.725°W/54.072; -2.725
Completed1842
ClientJohn Greg

Escowbeck Housea countrymanor houseon Caton Lane inQuernmore[1]nearLancaster, Lancashirewas constructed in 1842[2]in extensive parkland and countryside. It is situated overlooking theCrook of Lunesouth of the road from Lancaster toCatonandHornby,near where the Escow Beck from which it takes its name, flows into theRiver Lune.[3]The name Escow Beck is derived from the Old Norseeski+hofudandbekkrmeaning the beck by the ash tree hill. It was recorded as Escouthebroc in 1225 and Escouthe bec in 1241.[4]The gardens, created in the early 20th century, had a fish pond through which the Escow Beck flows and boat house.[5]The house was divided into apartments during the 1950s.

Residents

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John Greg moved to the area in 1820 to manage a mill in Caton, part of Samuel Greg & Company, owned by his father.[6]John Greg built Escowbeck and founded the Lancaster Guardian. After the death of John Greg, the Dobson family leased the house. The family suffered fromtyphus feverand were isolated as part of an epidemic for more than a year.[7]Thomas Hodgson who built Lowe Mill in Caton lived at Escowbeck.[8]In 1938 Lieutenant Colonel Sir Norman Seddon-Brown moved into the house.

Greg Observatory

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The Gregs were interested in astronomy and John Greg built anobservatoryin a wooden structure built on stone foundations at Escowbeck. John's brother Robert and his sons Edward and John Phillip shared the interest. John Phillip Greg retired early to pursue his interest and was credited with being one of the first people to recognise theGeminid meteor shower.[6] After the death of John Greg in 1882, his son Albert gave the contents of the observatory to Lancaster Corporation, and they were rehoused in a public observatory as a memorial to John Greg. Greg was an important employer and public figure who had been mayor of Lancaster three times, a magistrate and a charity and port commissioner.[6]

References

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Notes
  1. ^QuernmoreTownship Boundaries,GenUKI,retrieved29 March2011
  2. ^Chapter 13: The Lune to Lancaster(PDF),Drakkar Press,retrieved29 March2011
  3. ^Farrer, William; Brownbill, J, eds. (1914),"Quernmore",A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 8,British History Online, pp. 74–76,retrieved29 March2011
  4. ^Mills 1976,p. 82
  5. ^Escowbeck,parksandgardens.ac.uk, archived fromthe originalon 26 March 2012,retrieved30 March2011
  6. ^abcWade, P. (1992), "Lancaster's lost observatory",Journal of the British Astronomical Association,102,Harvard University: 160,Bibcode:1992JBAA..102..160W
  7. ^"Reminiscences of Miss Isabel Dobson (1806-1882) | Caton Village".Archived fromthe originalon 7 September 2008.
  8. ^David Richardson; Anthony Tibbles; Suzanne Schwarz,Liverpool and transatlantic slavery,Liverpool University Press (2007)
Bibliography