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The Orangery
Lyme Hall is part sixteenth,
part seventeenth, and part eighteenth century
and is the largest house in Cheshire. The grandeur
of the interior includes ceiling paintings by
Leoni, a substantial collection of English clocks,
priceless Mortlake tapestries, as well as plaster
casts of Greek friezes showing battle scenes,
brought here by Thomas Legh, and Grinling Gibbon's
woodcarvings. Impressive gardens and parkland
which hosts red and fallow deer, as well as
a sunken "Dutch" formal garden and
lake.
The surrounding parkland
is nearly 1400 acres and gives good views of
the Pennine Hills and the Cheshire Plain.
The estate has an Orangery built by Wyatt. Lyme
Park was the family home of the Leghs for 600
years, until it was taken over in 1946 to be
owned by the National trust and part-financed
by Stockport Borough Council.
