Hunton Park

Hunton Park is a large country house and estate in Abbots Langley, in south west Hertfordshire, in the United Kingdom.

It later passed around 1850 to Sir Henry Robinson Montagu, the 6th Lord Rokeby, a soldier who had fought at Waterloo as a 16-year-old Ensign and later commanded a division of the British army in the Crimean War.

[1] Gladstone made a thousand pounds worth of improvements to the property, but a fire on 8 March 1908 completely destroyed the house, and it had to be demolished.

[1] In 1930, the house was sold to Francis Edwin Fisher, a substantial landowner, farmer, meat wholesaler and businessman who frequently travelled the world with his wife, the explorer and journalist Violet Cressy-Marcks.

Shortly after this period, Paul Edwin Hember, the owner of several small businesses, bought the house and changed its name to Hunton Park.

As Hazelwood House illustrated in The Studio Yearbook of Decorative Art 1911