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Cassiobury

Cassiobury
Wide, leafy suburban road with 1930s detached houses
Cassiobury Drive
Cassiobury is located in Hertfordshire
Cassiobury
Cassiobury
Cassiobury shown within Hertfordshire
Population 14,031 
OS grid reference TQ106969
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WATFORD
Postcode district WD17 WD18
Dialling code 01923
Police Hertfordshire
Fire Hertfordshire
Ambulance East of England
EU Parliament East of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
HertfordshireCoordinates: 51°39′36″N 0°24′04″W / 51.66°N 0.401°W / 51.66; -0.401

The Cassiobury Estate is a suburban residential area of Watford in Hertfordshire, England. It is bounded to the south by Cassiobury Park, the main public park in the town, to the west by playing fields next to the River Gade, and to the northeast by Hempstead Road. It is mostly characterised by 1930s Mock Tudor houses.

To the northwest of Cassiobury, outside the Borough of Watford in the Three Rivers District, is The Grove, the former estate and house of the Earls of Clarendon. This has been converted into a luxury hotel and with extensive grounds.

The area is currently served by a London Underground station, Watford tube station, the terminus of the Metropolitan line's Watford branch. This station is due to close in 2016 when the line is diverted to terminate at Watford Junction as part of the Croxley Rail Link project; after this, the Cassiobury will be served by the new Cassiobridge tube station instead, approximately 870 metres (0.54 mi) south of the current station.

The suburban streets of Cassiobury were laid out in the early 1930s on land that was formerly part of the estate of Cassiobury House, the ancestral seat of the Earls of Essex. The house, which originally dated from the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, contained lavishly decorated interiors and a substantial art collection and was surrounded by landscaped park land. Parts of the Cassiobury estate were sold for development land in 1908, and following the death of the 7th Earl of Essex in 1916, the family put the rest of estate up for sale in order to pay for death duties. Unable to find a buyer for the house, they had Cassiobury House demolished in 1927 and the estate was partly sold to Watford Borough Council to be used as a public park, with the remaining land sold to developers such as William King & Co and Charles Brightman for housing development.


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