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Great Fosters
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Great Fosters : ウィキペディア英語版
Great Fosters

Great Fosters is a 16th-century mansion which originally lay within Windsor Great Park and is still adjacent to the town of Egham, Surrey, England. It is a Grade I listed building, close to Heathrow and the M25 London orbital motorway.
==History==
Great Fosters was the London seat of Sir John Dodderidge (1555-1628), a Judge of the King's Bench and formerly Solicitor General to King James I. He had been brought up in Barnstaple, in North Devon, and purchased the estate of Bremridge near South Molton, Devon, as his country estate. His epitaph on his monument in Exeter Cathedral states ''"He departed this lyfe at Forsters nere Egha(m) in Surrey"''. Sir Robert Foster owned the house in 1639. When he died in 1663 he left the house to his son, Sir Thomas Foster. Great Fosters remained in the family following his death in 1685 when it passed to his daughters. In 1715, Sir Charles Orbey resided here, and it was not until 1787 that one of Sir Thomas’ great grandsons sold the property to a Mr Wyatt for £700.
Early in the 20th century, Great Fosters was owned by Baroness Halkett, Queen Alexandra’s lady in waiting. Later it passed to the Earl of Dudley and then to the Hon. Gerald Montague. Today it is owned by the Sutcliffe family.〔(History of the building )〕
The front of the house was used in the opening title sequence of the 1950s TV comedy series ''Whack-O!'' set at a minor public school.
Also used in the Rank Organisation film about the Titanic ''A Night to Remember''.
Frederick Furnivall was born at Egham, Surrey, the son of a surgeon who had made his fortune from running the Great Fosters lunatic asylum. Dr Furnivall had two other partners, one of whom was Sir John Chapman, one of the 300 founder members of the Royal College of Surgeons. Prior to the formation of this college, surgeons belonged to the Guild of Barbers and Surgeons. Sir John was one of “the modern thinkers” who believed that mental illness was not solely related to physical illness. No doubt his methods of treatment for mental illness were therefore quite revolutionary. Great Fosters thus became a lunatic asylum and despite this radical thinking he was described in local documentation as “Doctor to the Poor” in Windsor. It is believed, although not confirmed by Windsor Castle records, that Great Fosters was where King George III was housed when he was being treated for his insanity.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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