Blickling Hall: American man shares gingerbread house creation

  • Published
Eric Becker and his gingerbread houseImage source, Eric Becker
Image caption,

Languages teacher Eric Becker started building the gingerbread house of Blickling Hall in November

An American man said he was "blown away" by the public response to his recreation of an English stately home using gingerbread.

Eric Becker, 29, from Memphis, Tennessee, shared his "100% edible" design of Blickling Hall, in Norfolk, on a Norwich community Facebook page.

"After I posted it I was blown away by the kindness of people," he said.

Mr Becker spent about 60 hours making the house, which he has not visited in real life.

Mr Becker, who teaches French and Spanish, said he was inspired to make gingerbread houses by watching Mary Berry on the Great British Bake Off on BBC America.

Image source, Eric Becker
Image caption,

A Facebook post on the gingerbread Blickling Hall received 2,600 likes

He said he decided to recreate Blickling Hall, near Aylsham, because he had "always been interested in British country houses and I was looking for houses to replicate and Blickling just stood out as a particularly stunning house".

Mr Becker said he was now thinking of visiting the hall next year, should it become safe to do so.

Image source, Eric Becker
Image caption,

Mr Becker said Blickling House would be his second stop - after London - if and when he visits the UK

"I have always wanted to go to the UK and so as soon as it is possible I would love to go. The first stop would be London but next stop would be Blickling," he said.

Blicking Hall has been owned by the National Trust since 1940.

Blickling Hall

Image source, Geograph / Michael Garlick
Image caption,

The Clock Tower at Blickling Hall was one of the features recreated in gingerbread form

  • Blickling Hall was built by the surveyor Robert Lyminge for Sir Henry Hobart between 1616 and 1626, on the site of a late medieval moated hall which it largely replaced.

  • The red brick country house has a seven-bay front and square corner turrets.

  • One of its staircases was closed for more than 70 years until concerns over its "structural integrity" were resolved.

  • It is thought that Anne Boleyn, the queen of England from 1533 to 1536 and second wife of King Henry VIII was born on the Blickling Estate.

  • In more modern times, it has served as a filming location, including for the BBC comedy series I'm Alan Partridge, in an episode where Alan takes his girlfriend Sonja to what he told her was Bono's house - but was in fact Blickling Hall.

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