it was burnt down on the 30th November 1936
The Crystal Palace in London was burned down in 1936 due to an accidental fire caused by a workman's blowtorch during renovations.
The Crystal Palace burned down in 1936
Upon their original formation in 1905, Crystal Palace became known as the Glaziers. Since 1973, the team have been known as the Eagles.
The Great Exhibition was held in Hyde Park in 1851. A steel and glass building was built in the park, specifically to hold the exhibits. This glass building became known as the Crystal Palace. When the exhibition was over, the 'Crystal Palace' was dismantled and re-assembled in Upper Norwood, a suburb of South London and the highest point in London, where it remained until it mysteriously burnt down in 1936. It is rumoured that it was burnt down deliberately by government agents because it would have been an easy navigation point for incoming German bombers in the expected coming war. The stone foundations of the 'Crystal Palace' still exist and there is a station and football team named after it.
Crystal Palace burned down in 1936 and only the stone plinth now remains.
If the question is about consonants, the answer is Crystal Palace, an English football team.
It burned down in 1936
It was burnts in 1936
It didn't blow down. It burned down in 1936.
It burned down in 1936
It's actually spelt "Sydenham" and is in South London, just down the hill and to the East of Upper Norwood, which is where the "Crystal Palace" was until it burnt down in 1936. That site is marked by a BBC Television Transmitter mast.