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  1. Media in category "Daylesford House" The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total. Aerial view of Daylesford - geograph.org.uk - 1658121.jpg 640 × 480; 102 KB

  2. Daylesford. Musk. Musk Vale. Musk Vale. Musk. Daylesford is a spa town located in the foothills of the Great Dividing Range, within the Shire of Hepburn, Victoria, Australia, approximately 114 kilometres north-west of Melbourne. First established in 1852 as a gold-mining town, today Daylesford has a population of 2,781 as of the 2021 census. [1]

  3. PARK Daylesford House stands midway down the east side of a roughly oval park, almost 2km long from north-east to south-west and up to 1km wide. It slopes downhill from north-east to south-west. Plantation belts, Baywell Wood and Green Plantation, run along the north-west and north boundaries, while north and south of the House, up to the east edge of the park, are shrubberies and woodland.

  4. 23 de jul. de 2014 · Legend had it that they were turned from geese into stone by a witch. Hastings died in 1818 but his second wife, Marian, continued to live at Daylesford until her death in 1837. She is buried near her husband in the churchyard at Daylesford. Chris Koenig pays a visit to Daylesford House, the result of one man’s determination to reclaim his ...

  5. Daylesford Abbey is a Roman Catholic monastery of Canons Regular of Premontre, located in Chester County, Pennsylvania, about 20 miles west of Philadelphia. The Abbey is named after Daylesford, Pennsylvania , where the Norbertine Fathers established the foundation that developed into the Abbey.

  6. The church was rebuilt in 1816 by Warren Hastings who owned the nearby Daylesford House. It was again rebuilt to the designs of J. L. Pearson in 1859–63. The church is within the benefice of Kingham, Daylesford and Churchill with Sarsden but since 2017 has been owned by the St Peter's, Daylesford Charitable Trust. [3]

  7. Lake Daylesford is an artificial lake in the town of Daylesford, Victoria, Australia. It was completed in either 1927 or 1929 after many years of campaigning, beginning in 1893. [1] It was designed by Walter Burley Griffin , the American architect who won the competition to design the city of Canberra . [2]