The Palace Green was used for the scene showing a tent and 40 coffins to represent Philadelphia's 1793 yellow fever epidemic.
Nesfield was educated at Durham School, then located on Palace Green, before entering the army.
The college regulations state that "any student found picking the daffodils shall be hanged, drawn and quartered at dawn on Palace Green."
He cleared and leveled the Palace Green in Durham between the castle and the cathedral.
In addition, he gifted a large number of buildings on Palace Green, between the Castle and the Cathedral.
She also published an autobiography: Round About Three Palace Green (1939).
The school was in Langley's time situated on the east side of Palace Green to the north of the cathedral.
Cosin's Hall on Palace Green was opened as the university's third college in 1851.
All this activity was administered from the castle and buildings surrounding the Palace Green.
Up the hill, past the old defensive walls, the Palace Green reveals itself as a great square.