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Cottage and was
' Craven Cottage ' was originally a royal hunting lodge and has history dating back over 300 years.
The original ' Cottage ' was built in 1780, by William Craven, the sixth Baron Craven and was located on the centre circle of the pitch.
During this era, the Cottage was used for choir singing and marching bands along with other performances, and Mass.
Although Fulham was relegated, the development of Craven Cottage continued.
On Boxing Day 1963, Craven Cottage was the venue of the fastest hat-trick in the history of the English football league, which was completed in less than three minutes, by Graham Leggat.
Also, a special stone to commemorate Fulham 2000 and The Cottagers return to ' The Cottage ' was engraved on the façade.
The reason The Cottage was built was due to an oversight in the Stevenage Road Stand ( as it was then ), as Leitch had forgotten to accommodate changing rooms in his final plans.
Besides being the changing rooms, the Cottage ( also called The Clubhouse ) was traditionally used by the players ' families and friends who sit on the balcony to watch the game, but the club now sell those seats at a premium game-by-game rate.
In September 2011, a friendly between Ghana and Brazil was also held at Craven Cottage
* The original Craven Cottage site was covered in woodlands.
Craven Cottage was used like many grounds for fitness and training of the army youth reserves.
He was taken to Uxbridge Cottage Hospital, where for a time his life was believed to be in danger.
It was constructed in the colliery workshop behind Stephenson's home, Dial Cottage, on Great Lime Road.
Peel was born in Heswall Cottage Hospital in Heswall on the Wirral Peninsula, near Liverpool, and grew up in the nearby village of Burton.
Fulham temporarily left Craven Cottage whilst it was being upgraded to meet modern safety standards.
There were fears that Fulham would not return to the Cottage, after it was revealed that Al-Fayed had sold the first right to build on the ground to a property development firm.
A statue of Michael Jackson was unveiled by Al-Fayed in April 2011 at Fulham's Craven Cottage stadium.
On 26 September 2006, a statue of Maria Feodorovna was unveiled near her favourite Cottage Palace in Peterhof.

Cottage and lived
A photograph of the painting Eisenhower did of Telegraph Cottage where he lived during WWII
The new Duke and Duchess of York lived in York Cottage on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, and in apartments in St James's Palace.
Hilary lived at Barn Cottage until her own death in February 2005.
* Vincent van Gogh, artist, lived at Ivy Cottage, 395 Kennington Road, from August to October 1874, and from December 1874 to May 1875.
Anne Hathaway's Cottage is a twelve-roomed farmhouse where the wife of William Shakespeare lived as a child in the village of Shottery, Warwickshire, England, about west of Stratford-upon-Avon.
* Jack Klugman, actor, stated in the Rockland County Journal newspaper, that he lived on Kings Highway in Valley Cottage.
* Sir Walter Scott ( 1771 – 1832 ) wrote the novel The Heart of Midlothian and lived at Lasswade Cottage ( now Sir Walter Scott's Cottage ) in Lasswade from 1798 to 1804, where he wrote his Grey Brother, translation of Goetz von Berlichingen, etc.
Otto von Bismarck, the main creator and the first Chancellor of the second German Empire, had also studied law in Göttingen in 1833: he lived in a tiny house on the " Wall ", now known as " Bismarck Cottage ".
A plaque in Cockerell Rise, East Cowes, Isle of Wight, marks the location of White Cottage, where Cockerell lived and worked.
Coleridge Cottage was, between 1797 and 1799, the home of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, one of the founders of the Romantic Movement in poetry ( along with William Wordsworth, who himself lived three miles away ).
From 1833 till their deaths Charles and Mary lived at Bay Cottage, Church Street, Edmonton north of London ( now part of the London Borough of Enfield.
The Coleridge Way is a footpath which follows the walks taken by poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge to Porlock, starting from Coleridge Cottage at Nether Stowey, where he once lived.
He and Adaline lived in what is now the Crescent Cottage Inn.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge returned to Great Britain, where they lived at Cambridge Cottage, Kew, and later at St. James's Palace.
* James Cubitt ( 1836 – 1912 ), architect, best known for his design of nonconformist chapels such as the Union Chapel, Islington and the Welsh Church in Charing Cross Road in London, lived from c. 1880 onwards at Brook Villas and Cotsall Eaton Villas on the High Road, and spent the last years of his life at Monghyr Cottage in Traps Hill
* Poet Robert Browning lived in Telegraph Cottage near New Cross Road during the 1840s
* Ellen Terry ( 1847 – 1928 ) actor, bought and lived in a summer house called Tower Cottage in Winchelsea beginning in 1892.
One of D. H. Lawrence's houses ( Mountain Cottage ), in which he lived with his wife Frieda in 1918 – 19, stands below the B5023 road on the outskirts of Middleton-by-Wirksworth, approximately 1½ miles northwest of Wirksworth.
He lived for the rest of his life in Queen Charlotte's Cottage, near the main gates.
The house in which Jane Austen lived – " Chawton Cottage " – is now Jane Austen's House Museum and is visited by 30, 000 people each year.
John Logie Baird, the inventor of the first working television system, lived at Swiss Cottage from 1929 until 1932.
A deaf-and-dumb young man lived in the cottage in earlier times, hence the acquired name " Dummy Cottage ," an unacceptable term today.
The couple lived briefly in Rose Cottage near the village of Pontesbury between the years 1914 and 1916, during which time she wrote The Golden Arrow.

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