The house was built by Lancaster merchant William Sanderson, and sold in 1809 to John Bolden.
His expenditure on renovation work, at a time of post-war restrictions, caused The Hyning to be discussed in Parliament in 1950.
To the left is the front of a pavilion that includes a Diocletian window and a pediment.
[8] They were the last gardens Hancock designed before his death, and were completed by his son Bramley.
[12] There are sister communities at Brownshill, Gloucestershire;[13] Lille, France (the mother house of the order);[14] Bafor, Diébougou Department, Burkina Faso;[15] and Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo.