Woburn Abbey
Woburn Abbey from across the lawns and from above.
Woburn Abbey, in Bedfordshire, England, was the seat of the dukes of Bedford, with a house that was rebuilt from a medieval Cistercian abbey by Henry Flitcroft (in 1747–61) and Henry Holland (in 1787–88).
The 13th Duke of Bedford, succeeding to the title and to severe death duties (inheritance taxes) in 1953, determined to realize to the full the potential earning power of a “stately home” and opened it as a paying tourist attraction.
He was a resourceful publicist, and by the end of the 1950s Woburn Abbey was a name well known to the British public; by the 1960s it was almost as well known abroad.
Asked about the unfavourable comments by other aristocrats when he turned the family home into a theme park he once said, "I do not relish the scorn of the peerage, but it is better to be looked down on than overlooked."
Woburn's approximately 3,000-acre (1,000-hectare) park is the home of a magnificent collection of rare animals and birds.
- "Woburn Abbey." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopędia Britannica Premium Service, 2006.

