Tudor, timber-framed manor house with a moat and walled gardens, plus Elizabethan interiors.
Wheelchair accessible on the ground floor of the house - and a lovely house! Beautiful garden and a glorious kitchen garden - everything growing so well! The greenhouses aren't wheelchair accessible but you can see in. The rest of the gardens are accessible if you have a chair that can cope with gravel. Very exciting to visit a National Trust cafe that doesn't just have the identical bog standard menu you get in most places! We had yummy gluten free sausages and mash with greens from the kitchen garden.
Such a beautiful house. The children and I were quite impressed by the staff in the rooms that knew all about the history of the house and the people that lived there, the gardens were absolutely stunning, the most beautiful and fulfilled garden I've visited as yet,I know quite alot about flowers and found every flower I know plus more in the gardens, the wildlife moor was beautiful and full of butterflies and bees and grasshoppers that my son and I enjoyed playing 'locate the grasshopper' through sound, we had a fantastic afternoon
Beautiful moaned manor house that has beautiful gardens. The house itself has lots of history, with the family being puritans and attached to Cromwells New Model Army. The really interesting parts are the priest holes, which the trust has left open to be seen. There are walks along the wider estate and a very nice church, which is worth a look around 100 meters from the entrance. The usual cafe and shop on site. Staff and especially the room volunteers are worth talking to as they are so knowledgeable about the property.
Lovely place to spend a few hours. Be careful on approach as sat nav will take you down a single track road. Public signs keep you to a wider road. Large car park and easy to walk around. House is very interesting and the volunteers are in each room to explain what there is. Timed tickets to enter the house means that there's no crush, but you move around at your own pace. Cafe on site is good and the prices about average for this type of place. Plenty of space outside if you take a picnic. Recycled book shop is large although chaotic. Gardens are well tended and great for a wander.
What a charming place to visit. We arrived quite early, around 9.30am and there were loads of parking spaces..a very large car park. We went to the restaurant first and had a breakfast bap,which I can say was delicious..we then had a walk around the moat and house waiting for the house to open. Entry is with timed tickets which you are given when you check in at the visitor centre on entering. To us once inside it felt so much more bigger than it appeared from outside. Their were plenty of volunteers who loved to tell you about the house and the history..we are always thankful for the time they give for our pleasure. We had a walk around the outside of the house and gardens and back to the main courtyard..it was nice that it wasn't as busy as some of the bigger NT sites but deffinatly worth a visit.
Marvelous Tudor house lived in house from late 15th century to the 1980. Changes and bloodthirsty stories from the best and worst of Britain's history. Lovely flower and vegetable gardens to wander through.
On-site services
Wheelchair-accessible car park
Wheelchair-accessible entrance
Good for kids
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Wheelchair accessible on the ground floor of the house - and a lovely house! Beautiful garden and a glorious kitchen garden - everything growing so well! The greenhouses aren't wheelchair accessible but you can see in. The rest of the gardens are accessible if you have a chair that can cope with gravel. Very exciting to visit a National Trust cafe that doesn't just have the identical bog standard menu you get in most places! We had yummy gluten free sausages and mash with greens from the kitchen garden.
Such a beautiful house. The children and I were quite impressed by the staff in the rooms that knew all about the history of the house and the people that lived there, the gardens were absolutely stunning, the most beautiful and fulfilled garden I've visited as yet,I know quite alot about flowers and found every flower I know plus more in the gardens, the wildlife moor was beautiful and full of butterflies and bees and grasshoppers that my son and I enjoyed playing 'locate the grasshopper' through sound, we had a fantastic afternoon
Beautiful moaned manor house that has beautiful gardens. The house itself has lots of history, with the family being puritans and attached to Cromwells New Model Army. The really interesting parts are the priest holes, which the trust has left open to be seen. There are walks along the wider estate and a very nice church, which is worth a look around 100 meters from the entrance. The usual cafe and shop on site. Staff and especially the room volunteers are worth talking to as they are so knowledgeable about the property.
Lovely place to spend a few hours. Be careful on approach as sat nav will take you down a single track road. Public signs keep you to a wider road. Large car park and easy to walk around. House is very interesting and the volunteers are in each room to explain what there is. Timed tickets to enter the house means that there's no crush, but you move around at your own pace. Cafe on site is good and the prices about average for this type of place. Plenty of space outside if you take a picnic. Recycled book shop is large although chaotic. Gardens are well tended and great for a wander.
What a charming place to visit. We arrived quite early, around 9.30am and there were loads of parking spaces..a very large car park. We went to the restaurant first and had a breakfast bap,which I can say was delicious..we then had a walk around the moat and house waiting for the house to open. Entry is with timed tickets which you are given when you check in at the visitor centre on entering. To us once inside it felt so much more bigger than it appeared from outside. Their were plenty of volunteers who loved to tell you about the house and the history..we are always thankful for the time they give for our pleasure. We had a walk around the outside of the house and gardens and back to the main courtyard..it was nice that it wasn't as busy as some of the bigger NT sites but deffinatly worth a visit.
Marvelous Tudor house lived in house from late 15th century to the 1980. Changes and bloodthirsty stories from the best and worst of Britain's history. Lovely flower and vegetable gardens to wander through.