Elvetham Hall is a hotel in Hampshire, England, in the parish of Hartley Wintney about 2 miles (3 km) northwest of Fleet.
[4] The architectural historians Nikolaus Pevsner and David Lloyd called Elvetham Hall "A major house of [Teulon], but not one anybody would praise for beauty".
[3] Another architectural historian, Mark Girouard, called it "the holiest or unholiest of zebras, being not only striped, but also zigzagged and diapered all over with bricks, and slates of different colours... like an enormous multi-coloured jelly".
He died there in 1427 and the estate, along with his main seat at Wulfhall in Wiltshire, passed to his son-in-law John Seymour.
It passed down in the Seymour family and was visited by Elizabeth I, who planted an oak tree that still stands in the park.
[9] The Liberator's five crew and eighteen passengers were Free Czechoslovaks returning home after the end of the German occupation of Czechoslovakia.