Farley Castle
Farley Castle is an early 19th-century modern house situated at Farley Hill, Swallowfield, Berkshire.[1]
The Gothic-styled, two-storey house in red brick with battlements and round turrets, was built by Martin-Atkins and Woodbury c. 1810, and was the former home of Benjamin Brodie.
At one stage, it was the residence of adventurer, author & amateur archaeologist, F.A. Mitchell-Hedges, discoverer of the controversial rock crystal "Skull of Doom", who wrote his autobiographical "Danger My Ally" there in 1953/54.<Mitchell-Hedges, F.A. Danger My Ally Elek Books, london, 1954> From around the 1960s to the mid-1980s, the castle was the central focus of Hephaistos School. Hephaistos was founded by Miss Dorothy Woolley, for the purpose of educating boys with physical disabilities. Initially a day school based in the castle, Hephaistos became a Special School with the addition of amenities including a teaching block, dormitories, dining hall and a swimming pool.
During the 1990s, the area around the castle was developed into a housing estate.
References
- ↑ "Farley Castle". English Heritage list. English Heritage. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
External links
- Imperial College London THE BOTANIST IN BERKSHIRE, A PLANT-HUNTER'S GUIDE by MICHAEL J. CRAWLEY
- British History Online Parishes - Swallowfield
Coordinates: 51°22′50″N 0°55′21″W / 51.3805°N 0.9225°W