Alley 61

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Old Hyde Farm — John Bonham's Home, Rushock

Old Hyde Farm, Rushock, Rushock
Droitwich Spa, Worcestershire, UK

52.3280° N · -2.1670° W

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What happened here?

Old Hyde Farm in Rushock, Worcestershire, was the home of John Bonham — Led Zeppelin's drummer — where he lived with his wife Pat and their children during the band's most successful years. Bonham had grown up in the West Midlands and remained rooted in the rural working-class culture of Worcestershire throughout his life, despite his extraordinary wealth and global fame. The farm was a working property, and Bonham maintained a genuine connection to agricultural life that stood in deliberate contrast to the rock and roll excess he was simultaneously famous for.

Bonham died on 25 September 1980 at Clewer Manor in Windsor, Jimmy Page's home, where the band had been rehearsing for a forthcoming American tour. He was found dead having consumed an extraordinary quantity of vodka over the course of the previous day. He was 32. Led Zeppelin announced their dissolution shortly afterward, stating that they could not continue without him. The farm at Rushock, which he had established as his family home, passed to his family.

Old Hyde Farm is a private residence and is not open to the public. John Bonham's grave is at the nearby St Michael's Church in Rushock — a short walk from the farm — and is the primary pilgrimage destination for Led Zeppelin fans making the journey to Worcestershire. The rural setting, the church, and the surrounding countryside are deeply peaceful and entirely removed from the world of rock and roll. Fresh flowers and guitar picks are left at the grave regularly.

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