Prince Harry and Meghan Markle made the Nottingham Cottage, which is located on the grounds of Kensington Palace their home before tying the wedding knot in May 2018.
Two days after the ceremony, the couple returned to the property to make it their first home after marriage. The couple’s first marital home has largely remained under wraps, but there are a few things that aren’t a confidential matter anymore.
Nicknamed Nott Cott, it is a two-bedroom house and was often touted as snug, given that it is one of the smaller properties within Kensington Palace, Hello reported. After their engagement, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex appeared on BBC News from the cottage for the first and only interview.
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The couple was seen sitting on a large cream sofa inside the home, which was furnished with brown and cream palm print cushions. The walls were adorned with massive white panels and a sash window was seen behind them, and in front of that, there was a large floor plant with white flowers.
The window seemed to overlook the garden. There was a wooden dresser where Harry and Meghan had kept a cream-tinted lamp with a metallic gold base. Designed by Sir Christopher Wren, the home reportedly comprises two reception rooms, a small kitchen, bathroom, and garden. Harry had reportedly installed a hammock in the garden.
Prince Harry lived in that home alone after leaving the Army and moved out in 2011 so that his elder brother Prince William and Kate Middleton could use it as their first marital home before they moved to Anmer Hall in Norfolk. Before moving to Frogmore Cottage with Meghan last year, Harry moved back in and stayed there.
Princess Diana’s sister Lady Jane Fellowes and her husband Sir Robert Fellowes lived in the Nottingham Cottage in the past.