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Hagley and Park
Hagley Castle is in Hagley Hall # Park | the grounds of Hagley Hall.
According to the government's decree at that time, Hagley Park is " reserved forever as a public park, and shall be open for the recreation and enjoyment of the public.
" Hagley Park is characterised by its trees and broad open spaces.
Hagley Park was named after the country estate of Lord Lyttelton, who became chairman of the Canterbury Association in March 1850.
Along the eastern boundary, the Park is defined by the two kilometre loop of the Avon River, which extends into the side of Hagley Park.
The northern unit is Little Hagley Park ( 6. 96 hectares ), with North Hagley Park ( 87. 17 hectares ) lying to the south of Harper Avenue.
South Hagley Park ( 70. 507 hectares ) lies to the south of North Hagley Park, separated by Riccarton Avenue.
Hagley Park has frequently been a site for gathering large crowds together: it served as the location for the Great Industrial Exposition of 1882 and the New Zealand International Exhibition in 1906 – 1907.
The Ellerslie Flower Show has been held in North Hagley Park since 2008.
A golf course ( Hagley Golf Club ) is located in North Hagley Park.
South Hagley Park contains several netball courts, the Hagley Oval cricket ground and a heliport for Christchurch Hospital.

Hagley and is
The Hagley Museum and Library is a nonprofit educational institution located in Wilmington, Delaware.
Hagley Hall was the seat of Thomson's patron the Baron Lyttleton, and the poem's description of a sylvan dale is strikingly reminiscent of the Brandywine Valley.
The English Hagley estate is located in the West Midlands countryside approximately ten miles southeast of Birmingham.
It is served by the famous number 11 Birmingham Outer Circle as well as the Hagley Road Corridor buses and of course a regular National Express Coach Service.
It is however served by a fairly comprehensive bus network, and is on the Hagley Road Bus Corridor from Birmingham to Stourbridge ( route 9 ) and the Merry Hill Shopping Centre ( route 222 ).
The Old Halesonians Clubhouse is at Wassell Grove in Hagley.
The " Danilo " at the end of the Hagley Road is now the site of the Picture House nightclub.
The family seat is Hagley Hall, near Stourbridge in Worcestershire.
It is often found underneath oak and silver birch in Hagley Park in central Christchurch, New Zealand, where it is likely to have been introduced, probably on the roots of container-grown beech, birch, and oak in the mid-19th century — around the time exotic trees began to be planted in the Christchurch area.
The cemetery is located near the Hagley Museum in Greenville, Delaware.
The number 11 is Europe's longest urban bus route and first came into existence as two routes in 1923: the no. 10 ran from King's Heath to the King's Head ( Hagley Road ) via Cotteridge, and the no. 11 from Six ways Erdington to Acocks Green and Moseley.

Hagley and open
The library and archival collections owned by Hagley are open to the public for research, with a catalog available online.
2002 – Two new exhibits, " DuPont Science and Discovery " and " DuPont: The Explosives Era ," open at Hagley in honor of the DuPont Company's 200th anniversary.
* 1936: First two area schools ( renamed district schools in 1973 ) open at Sheffield and Hagley

Hagley and .
Their hiding place at Hagley, the home of Humphrey Littleton ( brother of MP John Littleton, imprisoned for treason in 1601 for his part in the Essex revolt ) was betrayed by a cook, who grew suspicious of the amount of food sent up for his master's consumption.
Humphrey Littleton, who had escaped from the authorities at Hagley, got as far as Prestwood in Staffordshire before he was captured.
In April 1786 John Adams ( the future second President of the United States on tour with Thomas Jefferson — who would serve as his vice president before becoming President himself ) visited Woburn Abbey and other notable house in the area, after visiting them he wrote in his diary " Stowe, Hagley, and Blenheim, are superb ; Woburn, Caversham, and the Leasowes are beautiful.
File: PutnamLatheHagley02. jpg | Belt-driven metalworking lathe in the machine shop at Hagley Museum
* William G. McGowan's MCI, 1968 to 1991 ( Online exhibit produced by the Hagley Library on the life of MCI CEO William McGowan )
Moorhouse Avenue and Hagley Avenue form the south and south-eastern boundaries, respectively.

Hagley and hectares
Offsite facilities include the nearby Christ's College cricket ground ( which also has football and rugby fields ) which consists of four hectares of South Hagley Park, and Kerr's Reach on the Avon River which is home to the Christ's College rowing club, consisting of a boat house which houses top quality rowing equipment.
The Gardens sprawl over an area of 21 hectares and lie adjacent to the loop of the Avon River next to Hagley Park.

Hagley and name
Hagley historians only know that the name was already in use well before E. I.
Since the name Hagley did not appear on the documents transferring ownership at that time, it seems likely that Dawes gave this name to the Brandywine location.
1984 – Hagley Museum and Library was designated as the official name of the institution.
Hagley Park is named after their family estate, and the port town of Lyttelton bears his great-grandfather's name.
The name Fendall Town was soon applied to the area northwest of Hagley Park all the way to where the airport is located today.
It takes its name from a major road junction, now a busy roundabout ( with pedestrian subways through a traffic island ) to the south-west of the city centre which lies at the outward end of Broad Street, where the Birmingham Middle ring road crosses the start of the A456 ( Hagley Road ).
It was bought by William Burley, whose daughter Joan married Thomas Lyttleton, whose descendants ( spelling their name Lyttelton ) also owned Hagley Hall and became Barons Lyttelton until the death of Thomas Lyttelton, 2nd Baron Lyttelton in 1779, when it passed to his sister Lucy and her husband, Arthur Annesley, 8th Viscount Valentia, later Earl of Mountnorris.
Blakedown was then part of Hagley, giving rise to the name for it of ' Hagley Road '.

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