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Brockhampton (band) Members
Brockhampton may refer to: *Brockhampton (band), an American self-described "boy band" and music collective *Brockhampton, Gloucestershire, Cotswold, England * Brockhampton, Tewkesbury, a location in Gloucestershire, England *Brockhampton (near Bromyard), Herefordshire, England **Brockhampton Estate, a National Trust property *Brockhampton (near Ross-on-Wye), Herefordshire, England See also *Bockhampton (other) Bockhampton is the name of several settlements in England: *Bockhampton, Berkshire, an area of Lambourn *Higher Bockhampton, a hamlet east of Dorchester, Dorset, birthplace of Thomas Hardy, and site of Thomas Hardy's Cottage *Lower Bockhampton, a h ...
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Brockhampton (band)
Brockhampton (stylized in all caps) was an American boy band/Hip hop music, rap Musical collective, collective founded in 2014Brockhampton's predecessor group, AliveSinceForever, was founded in 2009. Although there is a large overlap in membership between the two groups, Brockhampton members have referred to AliveSinceForever as a separate group. in San Marcos, Texas, San Marcos, Texas. Led by Kevin Abstract and formed partially through the online music discussion forum KanyeToThe, the group's final line-up consisted of vocalists Abstract, Matt Champion, Merlyn Wood, and Dom McLennon, vocalists/producers Joba, Bearface, and Jabari Manwa and producers Romil Hemnani and Kiko Merley, as well as Graphic Design, graphic designer Henock "HK" Sileshi, photographer Ashlan Grey, Web Design, web designer Roberto Ontenient (who also featured prominently in voice skits), and manager Jon Nunes. After releasing the mixtape ''All-American Trash'' in 2016, the group achieved critical acclaim and ...
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Brockhampton, Gloucestershire
Brockhampton is a small village east of Cheltenham in Gloucestershire, England. It forms part of the parish of Sevenhampton. In the 2001 census the parish had 349 people living in 157 households. The source of the River Coln, a tributary of the Thames The River Thames ( ), known alternatively in parts as the River Isis, is a river that flows through southern England including London. At , it is the longest river entirely in England and the second-longest in the United Kingdom, after th ..., is close to the village. References External links Villages in Gloucestershire Borough of Tewkesbury {{Gloucestershire-geo-stub ...
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Brockhampton (near Bromyard)
Brockhampton is a civil parish in Herefordshire, England, about east of Bromyard. The parish comprises the National Trust property of Brockhampton Estate and Park, which includes Lower Brockhampton House Brockhampton is represented in the lowest tier of UK governance by the seven-member Brockhampton Group Parish Council, which also represents the parishes of Linton and Norton. As Herefordshire is a unitary authority—no district council between parish and county councils—the parish sends councillors representing the Bromyard Bringsty Ward, to Herefordshire County Council. Before 1998, the parish had been part of the Malvern Hills district of Hereford and Worcester Hereford and Worcester ( ) was an English non-metropolitan county created on 1 April 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972 from the areas of the former administrative county of Herefordshire, most of Worcestershire (except Halesowen, Stourbridg ...."The County of Herefordshire District Council (Electoral ...
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Brockhampton Estate
The Brockhampton Estate is a National Trust property in Herefordshire, England. It is located to the north of the A44 Bromyard to Worcester road, opposite the northern edge of Bringsty Common and east of the town of Bromyard. The significant aspect of the Estate is Lower Brockhampton, a timber framed manor house that dates to the late 14th century, surrounded by a moat, and entered by a restored gatehouse at the front of the house. The house is surrounded by of farmland, some of it parkland, with specimen trees and of woodland. In 2010, the National Trust undertook a major restoration of the house using traditional wattle and daub building methods. The Brockhampton Estate was bequeathed to the National Trust in 1946 by Colonel John Lutley, in whose family it had been for more than twenty generations, although the name of the family had changed several times through marriage. The site of the medieval village of Studmarsh is thought to be on the Estate; in 2012, an archaeolo ...
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Brockhampton (near Ross-on-Wye)
Brockhampton is a village and Civil parishes in England, civil parish in Herefordshire, England. The village is near the River Wye, south east of Hereford, north of Ross-on-Wye, and south-west of Ledbury. The Wye Valley Walk passes through Brockhampton. The parish forms part of the Old Gore ward (politics), ward of Herefordshire Council. Prior to 1998, it had been part of the district of South Herefordshire in Hereford and Worcester. The population of the parish in 2011 was 229. The two most significant buildings in the village are Brockhampton Court and All Saints' Church, Brockhampton, All Saints' Church. Brockhampton Court was substantially rebuilt, in the neo-Tudor style in 1893, as the Herefordshire residence of Arthur Wellesley Foster and his American wife, Alice. In the late 1870s, Eben Dyer Jordan of Boston, Massachusetts had purchased Brockhampton Court, now a retirement home, as a wedding present for his daughter and her groom, A. W. Foster. The Park, Brockhamp ...
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