Filming at Hatfield House

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Filming at Hatfield House FILMING AT HATFIELD HOUSE Hatfield House, Hatfield, Hertfordshire AL9 5NQ www.hatfield-house.co.uk Some of the productions filmed at Hatfield House include: Greystoke - The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of Apes (1984) Batman (1989) Orlando (1992) The Avengers (1998) Shakespeare in Love (1998) Sleepy Hollow (1999) Band of Brothers (2001) Tomb Raider (2001) The Importance of Being Ernest (2002) To Kill a King (2003) Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (2003) Vanity Fair (2004) The Libertine (2004) Charlie & the Chocolate Factory (2005) Batman Begins (2005) The New World (2005) V for Vendetta (2005) Hot Fuzz (2007) Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007) Sherlock Holmes (2009) Get Him to The Greek (2010) Clash of the Titans (2010) The King’s Speech (2010) Agatha Christie’s Poirot - Hallowe’en Party (2010) Agatha Christie’s Marple - The Secret of Chimneys (2010) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 (2011) My Week with Marilyn (2011) Sherlock Holmes - A Game of Shadows (2011) Anna Karenina (2012) The World’s End (2013) 47 Ronin (2013) Introduction Hatfield House is the home of the 7th Marquess and Marchioness of Salisbury and their family. The Estate has been in the Cecil family for over 400 years. Its stunning gardens and parkland have been used as a location for many exciting feature films, television series and documentaries over the years. Its impressive architecture and wonderful scenery provides a stunning setting for filming, from period dramas to factual documentaries and modern feature films. For film makers Hatfield House is a popular choice for productions and is close to Pinewood, Leavesden and Elstree studios, with their excellent production facilities. We offer privacy, flexibility and experienced teams to help you make the most of your time with us. In addition to offering one of the finest Jacobean Houses in England, and the Tudor Old Palace, childhood home of Elizabeth I, we have a beautiful 42 acre garden, planted for year round colour. Estate Extensive country Estate; private roads and estate tracks and farmland; meadows and paddocks, ancient trees and mixed woodland; formal lawned gardens and parterres, topiary and borders; wildflower meadow and shrubbery; yew maze; Elizabethan knot garden; vegetable garden; ornamental lake; private river frontage. Buildings Farm buildings; modern and period cottages and houses; Victorian estate offices; adjoining 12th century church, Real tennis court. Jacobean House, with sumptuous state rooms: Book-lined library; armoury; fine staircases and fireplaces; dining room; chandeliers; tapestries and furnishings; Victorian kitchen with working period features. Modern Restaurant and retail units. Facilities Contemporary oak-beamed conference centre; meeting and conference facilities; prestigious on-site catering; 24 hour security; unlimited parking; luxury 5 star hotels within easy reach; wide choice of mid-range accommodation nearby. Connections •Situated in Hertfordshire, just 21 miles north of London •London Kings Cross, 25 minutes - entrance opposite station •5 mins - A1 junction 4. •15 minutes M25, M1 motorways •Air - London Heathrow 45 mins, London Stansted 40 mins, Luton 30 minutes •Private helicopter landing on site If you would like to arrange a location visit, please call Cherise Fairman on 01707 287052 / 07769 534524 or email [email protected] In addition, we have properties in central London and Cranborne, Dorset which may be available for film crews. The House In 1611, Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury built his fine Jacobean House adjoining the site of the Old Palace of Hatfield. The House was splendidly decorated for entertaining the Royal Court, with State Rooms rich in paintings, fine furniture and tapestries. Superb examples of Jacobean craftsmanship can be seen throughout Hatfield House such as the Grand Staircase with its fine carving and the rare stained glass window in the private chapel. The Marble Hall With its wonderfully extravagant oak carving by John Bucke, the Marble Hall remains much as Robert Cecil built it in 1611. Sometimes used as a dining room, it would have been used to entertain guests with lavish banquets, dances and masques. The Grand Staircase King James Drawing Room This elaborately carved staircase, dating from 1611, is one of This has always been the principal reception room in the the finest examples of its kind in existence. The gates at the House. It takes its name from the life-size statue of James bottom of the stairs were put there to stop the dogs of the I, presented by the King himself, which stands above the household reaching the state rooms and bedrooms. mantelpiece. The Long Gallery The Winter Dining Room The Long Gallery runs the entire length of the South Front, Two rooms were made into the dining room in the 1780s. The having been lengthened to 170 feet (51.8 m) in 1781. The chimneypiece is carved in marble and the tapestries of the Four ceiling, originally white, was covered with gold leaf by the 2nd Seasons show scenes of the everyday life of the 17th century in Marquess who was impressed by a gold ceiling seen in Venice. spring, summer, autumn and winter. The Library Adam & Eve Staircase Formed in about 1782, most of the chairs were made for the The name of the staircase goes back to the late 18th century. room in that year and have only recently been re-covered. The Although the staircase is 17th century, most of the carved windows overlook the West Garden and Old Palace. panelling on the walls was introduced in the 19th century. The Armoury Victorian Kitchen The Armoury began as an open loggia in the Italian This room forms the centre of a series of basement rooms. Renaissance style. In 1834 the windows were filled in and the The Kitchen, Still Room, Pastry Room and Scullery have been marble floor laid. Most of the armour was purchased from the restored back to 1846, the year in which Queen Victoria made Tower of London in the middle of the 19th century. her first visit to Hatfield House. East Garden The East Garden consists of the seventeenth century ‘New Pond’, elegant parterres, topiary, box beds and kitchen garden. The yew maze was created in 1840 and is 8 feet tall with two entrances, one each side. The West Garden The garden dates from the early 17th century and consists of the west parterre and lime walk, woodland garden and sundial garden and holly walk. The Tudor Old Palace & Garden The Old Palace was built in about 1485 and originally formed a quadrangle around a central courtyard. Its garden is based upon Elizabethan patterns and consists of three knots and a foot maze. Real Tennis Court (above), Stable Yard (below) Riding School (above), Restaurant interior (below) Red Brick Bridge The Broadwater St Etheldreda’s Church View across Hatfield Park Farm Hatfield House exteriors - North Front (above), South Front (below).
Recommended publications
  • Agatha Christie - Third Girl
    Agatha Christie - Third Girl CHAPTER ONE HERCULE POIROT was sitting at the breakfast table. At his right hand was a steaming cup of chocolate. He had always had a sweet tooth. To accompany the chocolate was a brioche. It went agreeably with chocolate. He nodded his approval. This was from the fourth shop he had tried. It was a Danish patisserie but infinitely superior to the so-called French one near by. That had been nothing less than a fraud. He was satisfied gastronomically. His stomach was at peace. His mind also was at peace, perhaps somewhat too much so. He had finished his Magnum Opus, an analysis of great writers of detective fiction. He had dared to speak scathingly of Edgar Alien Poe, he had complained of the lack of method or order in the romantic outpourings of Wilkie Collins, had lauded to the skies two American authors who were practically unknown, and had in various other ways given honour where honour was due and sternly withheld it where he considered it was not. He had seen the volume through the press, had looked upon the results and, apart from a really incredible number of printer's errors, pronounced that it was good. He had enjoyed this literary achievement and enjoyed the vast amount of reading he had had to do, had enjoyed snorting with disgust as he flung a book across the floor (though always remembering to rise, pick it up and dispose of it tidily in the waste-paper basket) and had enjoyed appreciatively nodding his head on the rare occasions when such approval was justified.
    [Show full text]
  • HERTFORDSHIRE. 11 Flower Arthur Esq
    DIRECTORY.] HERTFORDSHIRE. 11 Flower Arthur esq. 36 Princes gate, London SW Loraine Rear-Admiral Sir Lambton ba.rt. Bramford hall, Fordham Edward Snow esq. D.L. Elbrook house, Ash­ Ipswich, Suffolk; &; 7 Montagu square, London W well, Baldock S.O Loyd Edward Henry esq. D.L. Langleybury, King's Fordham Ernest Oswa1d esq. Odsey ho. Ashwell, Baldock Langley S.O.; & 36 Lowndes square, London SW S.O Loyd Frederic Edward esq. Albyns, Romford, Essex Fordham Francis John esq. D.L. Yew Tree house,Royston Lubbock Henry James esq. 74 Eaton place, London 8 W Fordham Henry John esq. Yew Tree house, Royston Lucas Col. Alfred Geo. C.B., M.V.O. Cliffside, Lowestoft Fordham Herbert George esq. Odsey, Ashwell, Baldock Lucae William esq. 'I'he Firs, Hitchin S.O Luc.as William Tindall esq. Foxholes, Hitchin Foster Professor Geo.Carey, Ladywalk ho.Rickmanswrth Lydekker Capt. Arthur, The Oottage, Harpenden S.O Francis Charles King esq. 7 Granville place, Portman L)'dekker Richard esq. The Lodge, Harpenden S.O square, London W McIlwraith Andrew esq. Campbellfield, St. Michael's, Garrett Edmund William esq. Ardeevin, Downs avenue, St. Albans Epsom, Surrey Macmillan Frederick Orridge esq. D.L. 22 Devonshire pl. Gaussen Casamaijor William esq. Howlands, Hatfield London W Gilbey Sir WaIter, bart. EIsenham hall, Harlow; & MaUl"er Edward esq. Lea side, Hertford Cambridge house, II St. Andrew's place, Regent's Marchand Isidore Henri.Alphonse esq.Orleans,NewBarnet park, London NW Marnham .Alfred esq. Boxm00r, Hemel Hempstead Gilbey Tresham esq. Whitehall, Bishop Stortford Marten George Ernest esq. The Bank, High st.St.Albans Gilliat Capt.
    [Show full text]
  • The Collection of the Cecil Papers, Hatfield House Library, Hertfordshire
    Gale Primary Sources Start at the source. The Collection of the Cecil Papers, Hatfield House Library, Hertfordshire Dr Stephen Alford University of Cambridge Various source media, State Papers Online EMPOWER™ RESEARCH The Royal Commission on Historical libraries of the castles and country houses of Queen Manuscripts [1] Victoria’s United Kingdom. In 1872 the Reverend J. S. Brewer, classical scholar The Cecil Papers in 1872 and editor of the great series of Letters and Papers of Brewer found at Hatfield 310 ‘stout volumes’ and 3,000- the reign of King Henry VIII, completed his first report on 4,000 other papers unbound, enough, he thought, to fill the papers in the collection of the Marquess of 20 volumes more. Even those documents arranged in Salisbury at Hatfield House in Hertfordshire. Even an volumes were not in chronological order, and this editor as experienced and distinguished as Brewer was became Brewer’s great headache in his first staggered by the scale of what he found at Hatfield: assessment of the collection: he was compelled, as he ‘The collection is so large and the papers so important put it, ‘to recollate all that had been previously done, that I was at a great loss how to begin and where to and arrange the whole series in one uniform end.’ chronological order; not indeed altering the place or John Brewer visited the Library of Hatfield House on position of the papers in the volumes where they now behalf of a Royal Commission on Historical stand, but leaving them as before’.[2] Manuscripts (popularly known as the Historical Brewer had expected to find the Cecil Manuscripts in Manuscripts Commission, or HMC) set up in 1869.
    [Show full text]
  • Part 1), September 2019 Historic Environment Associates
    Appendix 22: A conservation management plan for the central area of the Ashridge Estate (part 1), September 2019 Historic Environment Associates Ashridge Estate A Conservation Management Plan for the Central Area of the Ashridge Estate Part 1 Report Final September 2019 Contents Contents 1 Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 1 Background to the study ............................................................................................................ 2 National Trust Policy .................................................................................................................. 2 Spirit of the Place ....................................................................................................................... 4 Methodology .............................................................................................................................. 4 Authorship ................................................................................................................................. 5 Acknowledgements ................................................................................................................... 5 2 Baseline Information ......................................................................................................... 9 Ownership and Land Management ............................................................................................ 9 Covenants and Legal Restrictions on Management
    [Show full text]
  • August 2013 2 September 2013 4 October 2013
    In this issue... Welcome to the August edition of Your Berkhamsted By now the school holidays will be well underway and hopefully the sun will still be blazing down. There’s plenty going on in and around town this month and we have more ideas of where to take the kids on a day out, as well as recipes to try and a bit of history thrown in for good measure. Enjoy the rest of your summer! Helen Dowley, Editor Berkhamsted in the News 3 Local Noticeboard 7 Days Out With the Kids 8-9 My Berkhamsted 11 Local Professor’s Life Story 12 Heritage Open Days 13 Bike ’n Hike 14 Berkhamsted’s Swifts 15 Parish Pages 17 Hospice News 20-21 Chilterns Countryside Festival 23 Census Corner 25 B-Hive 27 A Century In and Out of Berkhamsted 28 Recipe 29 Summer Sport 30 Kids’ Recipe 31 Front cover: Clouds by Terry Wood Photo credits: P.16 Common Swift in Flight by Pawel Kuzniar The Town and Parish Magazine of St Peter's Great Berkhamsted Responsibility for opinions expressed in articles and letters published in this magazine and for the accuracy of any statements in them rests solely with the individual contributor. 2 Berkhamsted in the News In this month’s skip across the broadband airways, Julian Dawson discovers that surrealism is alive and well. For absolutely no reason at all let’s start Mix96.co.uk reports on an extraordinary this month’s column with a piece of attempt to construct a Travelodge kitsch from felting.craftgossip.com.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic House Museums
    HISTORIC HOUSE MUSEUMS Alabama • Arlington Antebellum Home & Gardens (Birmingham; www.birminghamal.gov/arlington/index.htm) • Bellingrath Gardens and Home (Theodore; www.bellingrath.org) • Gaineswood (Gaineswood; www.preserveala.org/gaineswood.aspx?sm=g_i) • Oakleigh Historic Complex (Mobile; http://hmps.publishpath.com) • Sturdivant Hall (Selma; https://sturdivanthall.com) Alaska • House of Wickersham House (Fairbanks; http://dnr.alaska.gov/parks/units/wickrshm.htm) • Oscar Anderson House Museum (Anchorage; www.anchorage.net/museums-culture-heritage-centers/oscar-anderson-house-museum) Arizona • Douglas Family House Museum (Jerome; http://azstateparks.com/parks/jero/index.html) • Muheim Heritage House Museum (Bisbee; www.bisbeemuseum.org/bmmuheim.html) • Rosson House Museum (Phoenix; www.rossonhousemuseum.org/visit/the-rosson-house) • Sanguinetti House Museum (Yuma; www.arizonahistoricalsociety.org/museums/welcome-to-sanguinetti-house-museum-yuma/) • Sharlot Hall Museum (Prescott; www.sharlot.org) • Sosa-Carrillo-Fremont House Museum (Tucson; www.arizonahistoricalsociety.org/welcome-to-the-arizona-history-museum-tucson) • Taliesin West (Scottsdale; www.franklloydwright.org/about/taliesinwesttours.html) Arkansas • Allen House (Monticello; http://allenhousetours.com) • Clayton House (Fort Smith; www.claytonhouse.org) • Historic Arkansas Museum - Conway House, Hinderliter House, Noland House, and Woodruff House (Little Rock; www.historicarkansas.org) • McCollum-Chidester House (Camden; www.ouachitacountyhistoricalsociety.org) • Miss Laura’s
    [Show full text]
  • Herts Walks Flyer.Pdf
    Stepping Out with Carers Invite YOU to join us on the STEPPING OUT in NATURE WALK series in association with NHS Social Prescribing Hertfordshire We offer scenic, sociable, rejuvenating walks at beautiful venues throughout Hertfordshire (stately homes and gardens, wildlife parks, National Trust and English Heritage Properties) with lunch included DATES FOR 2021 21 April—Ashridge Forest National Trust, ancient trees, rolling chalk downloads and lush meadows in areas of outstanding national beauty 20 May—Wimpole Hall Impressive mansion, gardens, park and farm 15 June—Audley End House, gardens and woodland. A special event with guide and talk by award winning wildlife writer, Simon Barnes. Gardens, park and woodland 8 July—Hatfield House Gardens, park and woodland August —Stockers Lake at Rickmansworth A country park and large attractive lake in the Colne Valley - a Wildlife Trust site —with Trust staff guides September—Forte Hall Grade 1 Listed Jacobean Manor House set in idyllic surroundings Grand Finale—Tewinbury Nature Reserve, Herts & Middlesex Wildlife Trust A special way to finish the year Plus—Groups of smaller walks in Bishops Stortford, Ware and Hertford Thanks to the generous support of the following organisations : Stepping Out with Carers A combination of healthy activity, a choice of walks for all capabilities and the opportunity to make new friends. Carers are welcome to bring the person they care for, or attend alone. Transport available where possible. All our walks are FREE OF CHARGE But BOOKING IS ESSENTIAL so contact us today either by email at [email protected] or by phone Sue 07836 283566 / Ali 07739 361061 and join us for some great days out!! @carersstepout carerssteppingout .
    [Show full text]
  • Collections Cecil Papers the Cecil Papers Are the Core Collection in Hatfield House Archives. They Consist of the Papers of Will
    Collections Cecil Papers The Cecil Papers are the core collection in Hatfield House Archives. They consist of the papers of William Cecil (1521-98) Lord Burghley and his son Robert Cecil (1563-1612) First Earl of Salisbury. There are also a few papers of William Cecil (1591-1668) Second Earl of Salisbury. The Cecil Papers comprise about 30,000 documents. They include grants from the Crown, legal documents, state papers, treaties, correspondence and political memoranda. There are some papers of the Earl of Essex and letters from Sir Walter Ralegh and Queen Elizabeth I. The Cecil Papers have been digitised and are available to view at the British Library, as well as at some universities Other papers of Lord Burghley survive amongst the State Papers in The National Archives <www.nationalarchives.gov.uk> and in the Lansdowne Collection in the British Library <www.bl.uk>. Similarly, many of the papers of Robert Cecil are to be found in the State Papers in The National Archives. The Cecil Papers have been comprehensively catalogued and described in the Calendar of the Salisbury (Cecil) Manuscripts which was published in 24 volumes by the Historical Manuscripts Commission between 1883 and 1976. It is advisable to look at the calendar before making any inquiry about the Cecil Papers. Sets are available at The National Archives, the British Library and in various academic and reference libraries. Estate Papers We hold estate papers relating to various Cecil properties, scattered among many counties. They consist of title deeds, manorial records, wills, conveyances, leases, accounts and legal papers. http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/manor-search The principal properties are situated in Hertfordshire (there were 13,389 acres in 1883) and Dorset (3,118 acres in 1883).
    [Show full text]
  • Hatfield House Archives Papers of the 6Th Marquess of Salisbury
    Hatfield House Archives Papers of the 6th Marquess of Salisbury - Box List *Please note that the numbering of these papers is not final* Please note: those files marked * are of a personal or sensitive nature and are currently closed for access under the terms of the Inheritance Act 1984, s 31 (3). The collection has not yet been weeded for duplicate or ephemeral papers. BOX 1 1 Conservative Associations – general 1996 - 2003 2* Chattels 1987 - 1997 3 Hatfield Conservative Association, Maynard House 1984 - 1992 4 Hertfordshire Conservative European Constituency Council 1987 - 1990 5 National Union of Conservative Associations – Wessex area 1987 - 1990 6 Hertfordshire Conservative Federation 1987 - 2001 7* St. Clou. Travel details, insurance, movement of chattels 1994 - 2003 8 Heritage of London 1996 - 2000 9 British Veterinary Association - general 1988 - 1998 10 British Veterinary Association - Broughton 1992 11 Mrs Wincott (British Deaf Association) 1994 BOX 2 1 Hertfordshire Groundwork Trust 1986 - 1997 2* Roxburghe Club 1993 - 2001 3 Garden Society. Membership correspondence 1989 - 2003 4 Royal Association of British Dairy Farmers 1987 - 2003 BOX 3 1 Church in Danger 1989 - 1997 2* Reform of the House of Lords, general correspondence 1977 - 2000 3* Recommendations for honours 1989 – 1997 4* Proposed sale of Childwall Abbey playing fields by Liverpool City Council 1989 – 1990 5 Will of Duchess of Buccleuch 1993 – 1994 6 Biography of Third Marquess, possible authors. 1992 – 2003 7 Salisbury Group. General correspondence. 1987 - 1995 8 Salisbury Review 1987 - 2001 9 Vice Presidency of the Herts. Conservation Society 1997 BOX 4 1* St. Etheldreda’s Church, appointment of Canon Laird as Chaplain, appointment of Rev.
    [Show full text]
  • I I­ I I Hatfield House: South Front CONTENTS
    _ I 1 _ I 1 GA$COYNE CECIL ESTATES -I I­ I I Hatfield House: South Front CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 04 HISTORY 06 ESTATE AGRICULTURE 10 FORESTRY 12 ECOLOGY 16 EDUCATION AND RESEARCH 18 THE ARTS 22 ENTERTAINMENT AND VISITORS 24 A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF THE ESTATE 28 EMPLOYMENT 32 DEVELOPMENT AND THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT 34 PROPERTY 36 COMMUNITY 40 CONSERVATION AND REGENERATION 44 A VISION FOR THE FUTURE 46 Cranborne Manor, Cranborne 5 INTRODUCTION Hatfield House and Cranborne Manor are two of England’s finest historic houses. However they are merely the centre pieces of thriving estates, the wider activities of which are often less understood. The estates have been at the centre of their local communities for more than four hundred years, and continue to flourish in spite of the challenges that the passage of time has brought. The team that runs the estates recognises that in order to maintain the high standards of the past and adapt to today’s demands, it is crucial that the estates remain fully engaged with their respective communities. Estates cannot stand still; nothing is more certain than terminal decline if preservation of the past outweighs the needs of the present and future. The estates are managed on behalf of the Marquess of Salisbury by Gascoyne Cecil Estates. While the challenges evolve, the ethos behind Gascoyne Cecil Estates approach to management remains constant: • To enhance our environment and secure the long-term prosperity both of the estates and their extended communities. • To preserve the best of what we already hold, improving this with new homes, high-quality public spaces and thriving businesses all of which will provide employment and support to local communities for years to come.
    [Show full text]
  • The Impact of Agricultural Depression and Land
    THE IMPACT OF AGRICULTURAL DEPRESSION AND LAND OWNERSHIP CHANGE ON THE COUNTY OF HERTFORDSHIRE, c.1870-1914 Julie Patricia Moore Submitted to the University of Hertfordshire in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of PhD September 2010 2 ABSTRACT The focus of this research has been on how the county of Hertfordshire negotiated the economic, social and political changes of the late nineteenth century. A rural county sitting within just twenty miles of the nation’s capital, Hertfordshire experienced agricultural depression and a falling rural population, whilst at the same time seeing the arrival of growing numbers of wealthy, professional people whose economic focus was on London but who sought their own little patch of the rural experience. The question of just what constituted that rural experience was played out in the local newspapers and these give a valuable insight into how the farmers of the county sought to establish their own claim to be at the heart of the rural, in the face of an alternative interpretation which was grounded in urban assumptions of the social value of the countryside as the stable heart of the nation. The widening of the franchise, increased levels of food imports and fears over the depopulation of the villages reduced the influence of farmers in directing the debate over the future of the countryside. This study is unusual in that it builds a comprehensive picture of how agricultural depression was experienced in one farming community, before considering how farmers’ attempts to claim ownership of the ‘special’ place of the rural were unsuccessful economically, socially and politically.
    [Show full text]
  • Hercule Poirot Mysteries in Chronological Order
    Hercule Poirot/Miss Jane Marple Christie, Agatha Dame Agatha Christie (1890-1976), the “queen” of British mystery writers, published more than ninety stories between 1920 and 1976. Her best-loved stories revolve around two brilliant and quite dissimilar detectives, the Belgian émigré Hercule Poirot and the English spinster Miss Jane Marple. Other stories feature the “flapper” couple Tommy and Tuppence Beresford, the mysterious Harley Quin, the private detective Parker Pyne, or Police Superintendent Battle as investigators. Dame Agatha’s works have been adapted numerous times for the stage, movies, radio, and television. Most of the Christie mysteries are available from the New Bern-Craven County Public library in book form or audio tape. Hercule Poirot The Mysterious Affair at Styles [1920] Murder on the Links [1923] Poirot Investigates [1924] Short story collection containing: The Adventure of "The Western Star", TheTragedy at Marsdon Manor, The Adventure of the Cheap Flat , The Mystery of Hunter's Lodge, The Million Dollar Bond Robbery, The Adventure of the Egyptian Tomb, The Jewel Robbery at the Grand Metropolitan, The Kidnapped Prime Minister, The Disappearance of Mr. Davenheim, The Adventure of the Italian Nobleman, The Case of the Missing Will, The Veiled Lady, The Lost Mine, and The Chocolate Box. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd [1926] The Under Dog and Other Stories [1926] Short story collection containing: The Underdog, The Plymouth Express, The Affair at the Victory Ball, The Market Basing Mystery, The Lemesurier Inheritance, The Cornish Mystery, The King of Clubs, The Submarine Plans, and The Adventure of the Clapham Cook. The Big Four [1927] The Mystery of the Blue Train [1928] Peril at End House [1928] Lord Edgware Dies [1933] Murder on the Orient Express [1934] Three Act Tragedy [1935] Death in the Clouds [1935] The A.B.C.
    [Show full text]