Membership
Your support helps us employ four dedicated Conservation Advisers who travel across England and Wales giving expert advice on planning applications affecting Georgian buildings and gardens. Quite often, especially with buildings listed Grade II, we are the only voice speaking up for a threatened part of our heritage. Membership also includes:
- Annual Georgian Group Journal
- Twice-yearly magazine
- Access to member events including lectures, walks and country visits
Young Georgian
Annual membership for under-35s.
The Young Georgians organise additional events.
Individual
Individual membership is for one person.
Annual and lifetime membership options are available.
Joint
Joint membership is for two people.
Annual and lifetime membership options are available.
Events
Featured
Event Details
£5 members/£7 non-members Arthur and John Morris played an important role in the development of Coombe, Firle and Glynde Places in Sussex and worked on houses in Lewes. They dealt directly
Event Details
£5 members/£7 non-members
Arthur and John Morris played an important role in the development of Coombe, Firle and Glynde Places in Sussex and worked on houses in Lewes. They dealt directly with clients even when there was an architect. Amon and Amon Henry Wilds worked mainly in two towns, Amon Henry shifting from builder to architect. He made a big impact on Brighton, designing houses, projects, churches and chapels. There must have been many more local entrepreneurs like these and we need to know more about them. The Wilds moved to Brighton and undertook speculative development as well as worked for clients. The Morris family did not, Lewes did not offer the same opportunities. Sue Berry will investigate these interesting characters.
The talk starts at 6.30pm.
Georgian Group members are eligible for a discount on their ticket by entering GGMEMBER at the checkout.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list.
Time
(Tuesday) 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
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Book NowUpcoming
april
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£15 members/£18 non-members Grinling Gibbons is by far the best known of a group of carvers working for the sovereign on new commissions at Hampton Court and Kensington Palace in the
Event Details
£15 members/£18 non-members
Grinling Gibbons is by far the best known of a group of carvers working for the sovereign on new commissions at Hampton Court and Kensington Palace in the 1690s, but he worked alongside others such as William Emmett and Gaius Gabriel Cibber in both wood and stone. This talk from Lee Prosser will examine how this collaboration created the varied decorative schemes in the royal palaces.
The talk starts at 6.30pm, doors open from 6.15pm.
Georgian Group members are eligible for a discount on their ticket by entering GGMEMBER at the checkout.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list
Time
(Tuesday) 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Location
6 Fitzroy Square
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Book Nowmay
Event Details
£50 (inc. refreshments & lunch), all day In the heart of the English countryside on the Hampshire/Berkshire border, you’ll find the elegant, but intimate, Stratfield Saye House, home to the Dukes
Event Details
£50 (inc. refreshments & lunch), all day
In the heart of the English countryside on the Hampshire/Berkshire border, you’ll find the elegant, but intimate, Stratfield Saye House, home to the Dukes of Wellington since 1818.
After the Battle of Waterloo the First Duke of Wellington or the Great Duke as he was universally known, was regarded as the saviour of his country and of Europe. A grateful nation voted a substantial sum of money to enable him to buy a house and an estate worthy of a great national hero. After considering many far grander properties, he chose Stratfield Saye.
Stratfield Saye House does not compare in either size or grandeur with the other great ducal houses and it was the Great Duke’s intention to build a huge palace in the north- east corner of the park, but fortunately the money was not available. He therefore set about making his home convenient and comfortable and, as a very practical man, he was well satisfied with the results.
The House today is lived in by the 9th Duke of Wellington and his family. Whilst the Great Duke’s wonderful collection of pictures are at Apsley House, which was given to the nation by the 7th Duke in 1947, Stratfield Saye House contains a fascinating collection of paintings and furniture purchased by the Great Duke with many mementos of his occupation of his modest country home.
Members to make their own arrangements for transport. Refreshments and lunch are included in this visit. This visit is for members’ only.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list.
Time
All Day (Tuesday)
Location
Stratfield Saye House
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£15 members/£18 non-members In the 1750s a debate unfolded in Rome as to which was superior: Greek or Roman art. Despite the publication of Vol.1 of Stuart and Revett’s Antiquities of Athens
Event Details
£15 members/£18 non-members
In the 1750s a debate unfolded in Rome as to which was superior: Greek or Roman art. Despite the publication of Vol.1 of Stuart and Revett’s Antiquities of Athens (1762), British architects and clients instinctively took their inspiration from Roman art for another generation or more. Steven Brindle considers the development of the Greek style in England, from its tentative and experimental mid-Georgian beginnings, to its sudden triumph in the Regency age, its establishment as the ‘public style’ in the 1810s and 20s, its relationship to the mainstream Neoclassicism of the late-Georgian age, its decline – and its somewhat different course in Scotland.
The talks starts at 6.30pm, doors open from 6.15pm.
Georgian Group members are eligible for a discount on their ticket by entering GGMEMBER at the checkout.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list
Time
(Tuesday) 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Location
6 Fitzroy Square
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£40, afternoon Set in the heart of Clerkenwell, the Charterhouse has been living the Nation’s history since 1348. Initially a Black Death burial ground, the site became home to the largest
Event Details
£40, afternoon
Set in the heart of Clerkenwell, the Charterhouse has been living the Nation’s history since 1348. Initially a Black Death burial ground, the site became home to the largest Carthusian monastery in the world until it was brutally dissolved in 1537 when 16 monks became proto-martyrs of the Reformation.
A grand Tudor mansion replaced the monastery. Elizabeth I spent the first days of her reign at the Charterhouse and James I (of England) created 133 Barons in the Great Chamber prior to his coronation. In 1611 Thomas Sutton acquired the mansion and site to house his new Charity, an almshouse and school. The school separated and moved out of London in 1872 but the almhouse thrives to this day amidst the medieval, Tudor, Jacobean and later architecture that makes the site so fascinating. This tour will include a guided tour of the Charterhouse, Master’s Lodge and a drinks reception in the Old Library.
This visit is for members’ only.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list.
Time
(Wednesday) 2:00 pm
Location
The Charterhouse
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Book Nowwed22may6:00 pmYG Visit: St Marylebone Parish ChurchYoung Georgian Visit6:00 pm Book now
Event Details
Join the Young Georgians on a private special access tour of St Marylebone Parish Church, designed by Thomas Hardwick in 1813-17. Guests will also (weather depending) be allowed to inspect
Event Details
Join the Young Georgians on a private special access tour of St Marylebone Parish Church, designed by Thomas Hardwick in 1813-17. Guests will also (weather depending) be allowed to inspect the roof and advised to dress appropriately. A drink and donation to the church is included in the ticket price.
£20. This event is open to all.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
Image: Alan Baxter
Time
(Wednesday) 6:00 pm
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Book nowjune
Event Details
£15 members/£18 non-members The gardens of the Earl of Burlington are among the most famous in the country but what do we know of the gardens which lay next door, and
Event Details
£15 members/£18 non-members
The gardens of the Earl of Burlington are among the most famous in the country but what do we know of the gardens which lay next door, and which were later acquired, adapted and incorporated into the present gardens?
Much new information has recently come to light on their history from the archives of Chatsworth House and elsewhere and will be the subject of this talk.
The talk starts at 6.30pm, doors open from 6.15pm.
Georgian Group members are eligible for a discount on their ticket by entering GGMEMBER at the checkout.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list
Time
(Tuesday) 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Location
6 Fitzroy Square
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CAMBRIDGESHIRE VISIT: Farm Hall and Island Hall, Godmanchester £75, all day These two handsome red brick Grade II* houses of the 1740s share many stylistic similarities, both playing significant roles in World
Event Details
CAMBRIDGESHIRE VISIT: Farm Hall and Island Hall, Godmanchester
£75, all day
These two handsome red brick Grade II* houses of the 1740s share many stylistic similarities, both playing significant roles in World War II. Each was built for an important public servant whose descendants included two distinguished generals. They are effectively country houses on the western edge of the small town of Godmanchester with views to the River Great Ouse.
Farm Hall was built in 1746 for Charles Clarke, a judge and MP. The north and south pedimented elevations are similar, of 3 storeys and 5 bays. The southern lime avenue dates from the 1740s, while a canal leads north to the Great Ouse. The owner, Prof Marcial Echenique, designed an obelisk to commemorate Farm Hall’s wartime intelligence use, while German scientists were interned there for six months in 1945 to elicit information about Germany’s nuclear plans.
Island Hall was built in 1749 for Original Jackson for his son John, Receiver-General for Huntingdon. The main elevations are identical, pedimented, of 3 storeys and 3 bays, with 2-storey, 2-bay wings. The house was bought in 1804 by Jacob Julian Baumgartner, a Swiss Huguenot merchant. His Vane Percy descendants still live there after nine generations, having repurchased it in 1983 following its wartime requisition by the RAF, subsequent conversion to council flats and a fire.
Andrew Wells will lead.
Members to make their own arrangements for transport. This visit is for members’ only.
Please read our Terms and Conditions before booking.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list.
Image: Historic England
Time
All Day (Wednesday)
Location
Island Hall
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Book Nowtue11jun6:30 pmYG Lecture: Spencer House CuratorYoung Georgian Lecture6:30 pm Book now
Event Details
The Young Georgians are delighted to host Victoria Wilson of Spencer House who will speak to us about her fascinating career managing the collections one of the last town houses
Event Details
The Young Georgians are delighted to host Victoria Wilson of Spencer House who will speak to us about her fascinating career managing the collections one of the last town houses of St. James’s, extensively restored by the late Lord Rothschild. Interestingly we will learn both about the history of the house and its varied role in the present day; as a heritage visitor attraction, company offices and private events venue.
£15, Young Georgian Members only.
Time
(Tuesday) 6:30 pm
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£35 The summer - with some sunshine - will have arrived by June, so come and spend a sunny morning along the banks of the Thames discovering this beautiful stretch of
Event Details
£35
The summer – with some sunshine – will have arrived by June, so come and spend a sunny morning along the banks of the Thames discovering this beautiful stretch of the River, with plenty of historical and contemporary themes.
We will discover a mortuary known as Dead Man’s Hole, English Delftware pottery and the Hanseatic League’s presence in the Steelyard. We will then move upstream to hear about Customs Houses alongside Geoffrey Chaucer, Roman docks alongside an operating freight wharf, while walking via stories of Baynard Castle and the pulpits of Blackfriars Bridge. We will also touch upon 1920s tiles, and twenty first century mosaics, before completing our summer saunter with seabird motifs and mudlarking tales. We will also discuss “shooting the rapids” at London Bridge, and the changing views of the London skyline.
The Walk will be led by Meg Ryder, a Londoner who hails from Pimlico and now lives in Camberwell. Meg is a qualified solicitor who left the law to establish bespoke walking tours in London to follow her passion for all things historical, artistic and architectural. Meg has a Masters in History from Edinburgh University, and studied History of Art and Architectural History in Rome.
We will meet at 10.45am for a 11am start. This event is for members only.
If tickets have sold out for this event, please email members@georgiangroup.org.uk to be added to the waiting list.
Time
(Wednesday) 11:00 am - 1:00 pm
Location
Tower Bridge