Where is Pineheath House Harrogate?

Where is Pineheath House Harrogate?

🏚️ Built in the late 1890s and located in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, this eerie, abandoned, rotting, 12 bedroom mansion was once the luxury home of Indian aristocrats; shipping magnate Sir Dhunjibhoy and his wife Lady Frainy Bomanji, who were friends with the royal family around the 1920s.

Who owns Pineheath house?

Millionaire Jason Shaw is hoping to restore the historic 40-room Pineheath to its former glory through an ambitious restoration and extension project. The Cornwall Road property shot to fame in 2014 when its deteriorating interior was revealed to be “frozen in time”, standing empty and untouched for nearly 100 years.

When was the Harrogate mansion built?

Built in the late 1890s and located in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, this eerie, abandoned, rotting, 12 bedroom mansion was once the luxury home of Indian aristocrats; shipping magnate Sir Dhunjibhoy and his wife Lady Frainy Bomanji, who were friends with the royal family around the 1920s.

Is this Harrogate’s oldest and most forgotten house?

Sir Dhunjibhoy was a philanthropist who used his wealth to support Britain’s war effort against the Germans in World War One, which led to him being knighted. Today, the property has barely been touched since Lady Bomanji died in 1986. It is truly one of Harrogate’s oldest and most forgotten homes.

Where did Sir Dhunjibhoy live in Harrogate?

The rambling 17,000 sq ft, 40- bedroom Pineheath House in West Yorkshire was bought by Sir Dhunjibhoy in 1927. he West Yorkshire town of Harrogate is an unlikely place to capture the way of life of a long deceased Indian millionaire. Yet Pineheath House, where Sir Dhunjibhoy and Lady Bomanji lived in the 1920s, does just that.

What happened to Sir Dhunjibhoy’s Pinehouse?

When Sir Dhunjibhoy died, in 1937, the house was inherited by his wife, Freny, who appears, like Miss Havisham, to have preserved Pinehouse virtually untouched. Perhaps the only concessions she made to the changing times were to put up a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II and to buy a 1970s spool tape recorder; both remain to this day.