Top 10 similar words or synonyms for sillwood

creeksea    0.697864

glynde    0.675576

wykehurst    0.667515

leckford    0.654789

smallhythe    0.654122

patcham    0.652819

iridge    0.649355

firle    0.646261

boerum    0.631865

bathwick    0.631257

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for sillwood

Article Example
Richard Samuel Guinness They lived at and rebuilt Deepwell House, Blackrock, Dublin. They had a second home at 17 Sillwood Place, Brighton, Sussex.
Saxon (film) "Saxon" was funded entirely by private equity, including the producers’ own mortgage. The film’s financing structure was first announced publicly in ScreenFinance magazine: “Sillwood Films is launching a micro-budget Enterprise Investment Scheme to finance its urban thriller Saxon. Unusually… The EIS will be used to give a tax incentive to individuals who have already put money into the film.”
Sir David Scott, 2nd Baronet After his 1805 defeat he sought a baronetcy for his mother's brother James Sibbald Scott of Sillwood Park in Sussex, which was granted in December 1806, with remainder to David. When James died without issue, David inherited the baronetcy and his uncle's estate. He then sold Dunninald to Patrick Arklay MP.
Thomas Lainson His first commission may have been a 13-house terrace on the west side of Norfolk Terrace, on the Brighton/Hove border, which has been dated to the mid-19th century. The road was developed in several stages from the 1850s. Lainson's design was in the Italianate style, popular at the time because of the fashionable influence of Queen Victoria's Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. (Lansdowne Mansions, now a hotel, has been attributed to Lainson, but its construction date of 1854 predates his entering into practice.) In about 1870 he built another terrace of Italianate houses nearby on Sillwood Road, adjoining Charles Busby's Western Cottages of nearly 50 years earlier. The whole street was renamed Sillwood Road when Lainson's 16 houses were finished. Adelaide Mansions, a four-storey seafront development in Hove, followed in 1873.
Amon Henry Wilds Oriental Place and Sillwood Place are the remaining parts of an ambitious scheme for which Wilds junior was hired in 1825 by a horticulturalist and landscape gardener, Henry Phillips, who had designed Kemp Town's enclosed gardens. He proposed an Oriental-style garden with a tall, steam-heated glasshouse called the Athenaeum, a library, museum and school, all surrounded by high-class houses. Wilds junior started building two north-south terraces accordingly, but Phillips' money ran out and he abandoned the project. A local magistrate bought the land in 1827 and asked Wilds junior to finish the work. Sillwood Place was built on the proposed Athenaeum site. Ammonite capitals feature prominently on Oriental Place, which is listed at Grade II*.