The Langtry Manor (formerly the Red House) is a country house hotel at 26 Derby Road in the East Cliff area of Bournemouth, England. The foundation stone is inscribed "E.L.L. 1877". A residence for 60 years, it was originally known as the "Red House", and after 1937 the "Manor Heath Hotel", before being renamed the Langtry Manor in the late 1970s.
Originally built and owned by widowed women's rights campaigner and temperance activist Emily Langton Langton (1847–1897),[1][2] after her death the house was sold.[2] In 1938 a new set of owners converted it into a hotel, "Manor Heath Hotel", which advertised it as having been built originally for Lillie Langtry by the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII).[2][3] However, despite the hotel's claims and local legend, no actual association between Langtry and the house ever existed.[2] Research by Anthony J. Camps, primarily based on research of Jane Ridley for her biography Bertie, and further researched by himself, has proven this.[4] The main source for the story, published by Laura Beatty in her book Lillie Langtry - Manners, masks and morals, was the hotelowner herself.[5]
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