Embley Park: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added


 

Line 10: Line 10:

Nightingale claimed she had received her first divine calling from God in 1837 at Embley whilst she sat underneath a tree in the grounds. She then stayed there after her return from the [[Crimean War]] for some time before returning for visits whilst living in London. After her death in London in 1910, her body was brought by train back to Romsey and her coffin carried from the station to the church at East Wellow where she is buried.

Nightingale claimed she had received her first divine calling from God in 1837 at Embley whilst she sat underneath a tree in the grounds. She then stayed there after her return from the [[Crimean War]] for some time before returning for visits whilst living in London. After her death in London in 1910, her body was brought by train back to Romsey and her coffin carried from the station to the church at East Wellow where she is buried.

Another family home, Lea Hurst, is located in Derbyshire in the East Midlands of England. Florence spent much of her childhood here and later returned during periods of work and leisure. The house retains its 19th-century architectural features and contains a number of authentic antiques associated with Nightingale and her family. The building is not currently a museum, but it is available for short-term stays: it [https://www.florencenightingalesuites.co.uk/en houses the Florence Nightingale Suites at Lea Hurst], allowing visitors to stay in the historic house and see the preserved interiors and everyday items associated with Nightingale’s life.

==The school==

==The school==


Latest revision as of 16:29, 4 December 2025

Family home of Florence Nightingale

Embley Park, now a school, was the family home of Florence Nightingale.

Embley Park, in Wellow (near Romsey, Hampshire), was the family home of Florence Nightingale from 1825 until her death in 1910. It is also where Florence Nightingale claimed she had received her divine calling from God. It is now the location of Embley, a co-educational independent school for 3–18 year olds. Embley was known as Hampshire Collegiate School until September 2019.

In 1826, Florence Nightingale’s father William Nightingale purchased Embley Park house for the family to use as a permanent residence with Lea Hurst being used as a summer residence.[1] The house was the larger of the two and was described as:

a good-sized plain square house of the late Georgian period, the situation warm and sheltered, the gardens very large and exceptionally fine. The shooting was good, London was reasonably near, and Fanny’s two married sisters, Mrs Nicholson at Waverley Abbey near Farnham and Mrs Bonham-Carter at Fair Oak, near Winchester, were within easy reach.[2]

Nightingale claimed she had received her first divine calling from God in 1837 at Embley whilst she sat underneath a tree in the grounds. She then stayed there after her return from the Crimean War for some time before returning for visits whilst living in London. After her death in London in 1910, her body was brought by train back to Romsey and her coffin carried from the station to the church at East Wellow where she is buried.

A school was first established at Embley Park in 1946. Mergers with various other schools followed, resulting in the creation of Hampshire Collegiate School in 2006. The school changed its name to Embley in September 2019. The school is part of the United Church Schools Trust.

50°59′08″N 1°32′34″W / 50.98556°N 1.54278°W / 50.98556; -1.54278

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version