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Attractions near The Homestead
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This is a list of the attractions near this bed and breakfast that are featured on AboutBritain.com
It is not intended to be an exhaustive list of all attractions near this bed and breakfast.
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Bygones Museum
(4 Miles)*
The museum houses a unique collection of antiques and memorabilia gathered together by the owners over a period of sixty years. |
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Canons Ashby House
(4 Miles)*
Canons Ashby is a romantic, 16th century Elizabethan manor house which has survived unaltered since 1710. Home of the Dryden family since it was first built, the house sits amongst beautiful gardens |
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Sulgrave Manor
(5 Miles)*
Sulgrave Manor is a superb example of a modest manor and garden of the time of Shakespeare, and was home to the ancestors of George Washington. |
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Brook Cottage Garden
(10 Miles)*
The 4-acre garden has been formed by an architect and a plantswoman since 1964 on the west facing slope of a valley. Originally the site comprised a paved courtyard surrounded on three sides by the 17th century Hornton stone house and barn. |
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Upton House & Gardens
(10 Miles)*
Upton House is a late seventeenth century house, built of the mellow local stone, which was remodelled by Walter Samuel, 2nd Viscount Bearstead, after his purchase of the property in 1927. |
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Broughton Castle
(11 Miles)*
The home of Lord and Lady Saye and Sele, and owned by the same family for over 600 years. |
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Rugby School Museum
(13 Miles)*
The Museum has now re-opened at its new site in Barby Road. |
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Royal Pump Rooms Leamington Spa
(14 Miles)*
The Town's Art Gallery and Museum, Library and Tourist Information Centre are all in the restored Royal Pump Rooms building, alongside the existing Assembly Room and a Café. |
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National Waterways Museum
(14 Miles)*
Housed in a restored cornmill in the picturesque village of Stoke Bruerne, the museum collection vividly portrays the heritage of 200 years of inland waterways. |
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Holdenby House and Gardens
(14 Miles)*
Just across the fields from Althorp lies Holdenby, a house whose royal connections go back over 400 years. Built by Sir Christopher Hatton to entertain Elizabeth I, it became the Palace of James I and the prison of his son, Charles I. |
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Towns near The Homestead
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This is a list of the towns near this bed and breakfast that are featured on AboutBritain.com
It is not intended to be an exhaustive list of all towns near this bed and breakfast.
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Byfield
(1 Mile)*
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Hellidon
(2 Miles)*
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Priors Marston
(2 Miles)*
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Charwelton
(2 Miles)*
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Eydon
(3 Miles)*
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Fawsley
(4 Miles)*
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Chipping Warden
(4 Miles)*
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Badby
(4 Miles)*
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Wormleighton
(4 Miles)*
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Preston Capes
(4 Miles)*
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