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Attractions in Hatch End & Things to Do in Hatch End
(and nearby) |
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Harrow Museum & Heritage Centre
(1 Mile)*
Discover Harrow's historic past at Harrow Museum! Entry is free, and with a number of temporary exhibitions and special events throughout the year, there is always something new to see or do. |
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Aldenham Country Park
(4 Miles)*
Aldenham Country Park - owned and managed by Hertfordshire County Council - was created on green belt land in 1971 as an area for quiet countryside recreation. |
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Royal Air Force Museum London
(5 Miles)*
The Royal Air Force Museum London, North West London is one of the best flight exhibitions in the world. |
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Colne Valley Regional Park
(6 Miles)*
The Colne Valley Regional Park provides a fantastic area for people to explore. Covering 40 square miles of countryside to the west of London, the Park is a mosaic of woodland, farmland, and waterways with many hidden treasures. |
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Osterley Park
(7 Miles)*
The spectacular 18th-century interiors of the Osterley Park house comprise one of Britain's most complete examples of Robert Adam's work. |
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Boston Manor House
(8 Miles)*
Boston Manor House is a fine Jacobean manor house built in 1623 and situated in parkland containing a lake and ancient cedar trees. |
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Kew Bridge Steam Museum
(8 Miles)*
Steam power comes alive at London's Kew Bridge Steam Museum. Built in the 19th century to supply London with water, the museum is recognised as the most important historic site of the water supply industry in Britain. |
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Musical Museum
(8 Miles)*
During your visit to the Musical museum you will experience the fascinating world of automatic musical instruments through a continuous demonstration in which the instruments are explained and played. |
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Fenton House
(8 Miles)*
Fenton House is a late 17th-century construction with an outstanding collection of porcelain, 17th-century needlework pictures, Georgian furniture and early keyboard instruments, most of which are in working order. |
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On 3 July 2003 the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew was officially inscribed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. |
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Chenies Manor House
(8 Miles)*
The semi-fortified brick Manor House was built by Sir John Cheyne about 1460. Sir John Russell (later the 1st Earl of Bedford) made additions in 1526, and it was his principal residence. |
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Royal National Rose Garden
(9 Miles)*
The new Gardens of the Rose were designed for the Royal National Rose Society by Michael Balston and built by Adam Frost Landscapes (both Gold Medal Winners at the Chelsea Flower Show). |
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Burgh House & Hampstead Local History Museum
(9 Miles)*
Burgh House is a handsome Queen Anne house in the heart of Old Hampstead, with original panelled rooms and staircase, and wrought-iron gates. |
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Kenwood House
(9 Miles)*
Kenwood House presides over the extensive Hampstead Heath with superb views of the city of London from its hilltop position. |
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Freud Museum
(9 Miles)*
The Freud Museum was the home of Sigmund Freud and his family when they escaped Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938. It remained the family home until Anna Freud, the youngest daughter, died in 1982. |
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Keats House
(9 Miles)*
This is the house where John Keats lived from 1818 to 1820 with his friend Charles Brown. It is where he wrote some of his most intensely moving poems including 'Ode to a Nightingale'. |
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Milton's Cottage
(9 Miles)*
Come and visit the Grade 1 listed XVIth Century cottage where John Milton lived and completed "Paradise Lost" and started "Paradise regained". |
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2 Willow Road
(9 Miles)*
This house is one of Britain's most important examples of Modernist architecture; the former home of Erno Goldfinger and designed and built by him in 1939. |
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Hogarths House
(9 Miles)*
Hogarth's House in Chiswick was built around 1700 and was the country home of the great painter, engraver and satirist William Hogarth from 1749 until his death in 1764. |
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Willows Farm Village
(9 Miles)*
Just a short distance from London, the unique Willows Farm Village is an incredible rural retreat, ideal for family fun days out. |
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7 Hammersmith Terrace
(9 Miles)*
7 Hammersmith Terrace is an internationally important Arts and Crafts "time warp" full of William Morris treasures. It's one of a terrace of Georgian houses overlooking the Thames. |
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Lord's
(9 Miles)*
You don't have to be a cricket lover to be thrilled by Lord's. When you tour this world-famous arena you tread in the footsteps of the giants of the game. |
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Leighton House Art Gallery Museum
(10 Miles)*
Leighton House was the home of Frederic, Lord Leighton, (1830-1896), the great classical painter and President of the Royal Academy. |
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Linley Sambourne House
(10 Miles)*
Linley Sambourne House was the home of Edward Linley Sambourne a leading Punch cartoonist of the late Victorian and Edwardian period. |
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London Zoo
(10 Miles)*
London Zoo, the most famous Zoo in the world, is situated on the north side of Regent's Park. London Zoo first became established in 1828, housing animals for scientific study. |
Above, you'll find a list of the Tourist Attractions in Hatch End and things to do in Hatch End (and nearby) listed on AboutBritain.com.
So if you're wondering what to do in Hatch End, simply click on some of the links on this page to see detailed information on places to go.
As you can see, there's plenty of ideas for family days out in Hatch End and the surrounding area - so you need never be short of places to go and things to do in Hatch End again.
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