Our next stop was going to be Winchester Cathedral, but, finding no lay-by to pull into for lunch, we stopped at Hinton Ampner, another National Trust home and garden we'd not heard of, and followed the crowds from the over-flow carpark to the house. The house was built in the latter 20th century, replacing the Georgian original that had burned.
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| Wisteria wall; Vicki really likes wisterias | 
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| Cruel and unusual punishment for a magnolia | 
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| Front of the house; the rhodos are coming on now | 
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| Tiny roses | 
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| Trained on another wall | 
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| Chandelier in main drawing room | 
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Many of the great houses took in children from London and other cities during WWII, sometimes whole schools; this is from a reunion of a girls' school that resided at Hinton Ampner in those years | 
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| Drawing room; not Georgian | 
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| View of the grounds from the drawing room | 
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| Library | 
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| Dining room | 
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| Champagne trolley | 
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| Master bath | 
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| Master bedroom | 
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Beautifully delicate quilting, done by the three sisters of the owner; none had an heir, so the house came to the National Trust | 
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Roof repairs have required that many of the furnishings be put in storage for the time being | 
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| Plenty remains on view, however | 
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| In the side gardens | 
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| Thus, tulips still going strong | 
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| Ancient parish church in the background | 
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| The door of which is Saxon | 
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| Out behind the house, above the formidable ha-ha | 
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| The grounds | 
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| Largest cattle grate yet | 
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| Back of house | 
 
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