Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Dovehouse Farm seems to have been built on its site and incorporating fragments of the old house.
Robert died in the fire leaving the Dovehouse, etc., to his widow Elizabeth.
The current pitch stands on the site of the Dovehouse Pool, an ornamental pond drained in 1889.
Shake, quoth the dovehouse!
He was accused of driving away almost all the birds in the dovehouse, and of pulling up many healthy fruit-bearing trees from the orchard.
When John Drew occupied the Estate in 1501 it consisted of the House, a dovehouse, small park, orchards, and gardens.
Ottawa: Dovehouse Editions, 1981.
Emlyn Williams died at his flat in Dovehouse Street, Chelsea, London - aged 81, from complications from cancer on 25 September 1987.
(On the date of composition, see John Anthony Butler's edition of The Man in the Moon [Dovehouse, 1995], pp.
Ottawa: Dovehouse Editions/ Binghamton, New York: Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1992.
A plaque commemorating Smith's bravery on 23 February 1944, is located on Dovehouse Gree, on the King's Road in Chelsea.
Dennis, Nigel, ed., Studies on Ramón Gómez de la Serna (Ottawa: Dovehouse, 1988)
A visit to the walled kitchen garden at Felbrigg in Norfolk, complete with handsome dovehouse, is a good way of observing the changes which had begun to take place by the eighteenth century.
About three o'clock he woke, thought over his vision and decided that he ought not to wait until the morning to tell me about it; so he got up, dressed and came round to Dovehouse Street.
They had bought one of the delightful new houses that were being built in Dovehouse Street, Chelsea; and behind it, at the far end of a pleasant little paved garden, it had another building which was virtually a self-contained flat.
Mr Andrew Stephenson, solicitor for Mrs Plugge, who lives in Dovehouse Street, Chelsea, told Mr Justice Brooke sitting in London, that the newspaper, and the writer of the story, Rosemary Collins, now accepted that was not true.
The transfer deed of 1474/5 mentions that the plot had gardens and orchards, while Richard Churche's will of 1592 describes the property as having "gardens meadowe dovehouse stable & buyldings" and an orchard is also mentioned in the 1691 rate book.
There was an inquisition into the land at Lancaster in 1367 that stated 'there is at Liverpull a certain Castle, the foss whereof and the herbage are worth by the year 2s., and there is a dovehouse under the Castle which is worth by the year 6s.8d.'
The exact location would only be fixed when the line is approved but under the June 2008 safeguarding the surface structures of interest lie either side of Dovehouse Street (including Dovehouse Green) at its junction with Kings Road and some small buildings on the south side of the road opposite.