Benjamin Broadbent (builder)Benjamin Broadbent (1813–1862) was an English master builder, stonemason, and architect. In 1840 in Leicester, he formed the company Broadbents Ltd, a busy which serviced builders' merchants and roofing contractors. He was also associated with Broadbent and Hawley, stone and marble masons and gravestone cutters.[1] Broadbent built his home, Victoria House, in 1861 in Humberstone. The large estate included a mansion house, stables, coach house, winery, orchard, conservatories and outbuildings. His first wife was the daughter of a farmer from Dodleston, Cheshire called Anne Wright and they had four children. The eldest, also Benjamin, inherited the family business. His second wife was Mary Geary and they had six children. Three years after his death, Victoria House was purchased by the Leicester Corporation to establish the Leicester Borough Asylum, which became the Towers Hospital.[2] Selected worksHis work includes a marble tablet of commemoration in All Saints Church, Thurcaston.[3] Pevsner attributes Victorian ceilings in Althorp's Billiard Room (formerly the Yellow Drawing Room or Rubens Room) and South Drawing Room to Broadbent.[4][5] Broadbent erected a plaque on a gable end next to Leicaster's old Bow Bridge in 1856,[6] which remains part of the 17th century legend of the fate of Richard III’s body.[7] When the old Bow Bridge at Leicester was demolished to make way for a new and more serviceable structure, a very good engraving of it appeared in The Illustrated London News of February 9, 1861. It was an old bridge when King Richard III passed over it en route for Bosworth Field. The article read in part: —
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