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Attractions in Seal & Things to Do in Seal
(and nearby) |
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Knole Park
(1 Mile)*
Knole Park is just the place to combine a round of golf with a historic and interesting National Trust property. |
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Ightham Mote
(3 Miles)*
Ightham Mote, pronounced "Item Moat", is a superbly restored 14th century half-timbered house set in a deep wooded valley. |
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Emmetts Garden
(4 Miles)*
This charming and informal garden at the highest point in Kent was laid out in the late 19th Century., with many exotic and rare trees and shrubs from across the world. |
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Lullingstone Castle and the World Garden
(5 Miles)*
Lullingstone Castle - Historic Family Mansion, Church and home to the World Garden. |
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Great Comp Garden
(5 Miles)*
Set in the heart of the Garden of England and surrounding a 17th century house, Great Comp Garden is the delightful creation of Roderick and Joy Cameron, their having moved to Great Comp in 1957. |
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Quebec House
(6 Miles)*
Those who enjoy British military history will particularly appreciate a trip to Quebec House in Kent. It was the birthplace of General James Wolfe who went on to defeat the French at Quebec in 1759. |
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Chartwell
(6 Miles)*
Visit the home of Sir Winston Churchill and gain an insight into the domestic life of Britain's famous wartime Prime Minister. |
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Tonbridge Castle
(6 Miles)*
Medieval Gatehouse and Motte and Bailey Castle Grounds. |
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Squerryes Court
(6 Miles)*
Experience the warm welcome of this beautiful 17th Century manor house, still lived in by the descendants of John Warde who purchased Squerryes from the Earl of Jersey in 1731. |
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Penshurst Place & Gardens
(7 Miles)*
Penshurst Place is one of England's finest historic houses set in the Weald of Kent's peaceful rural landscape. |
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Bromley Museum
(8 Miles)*
At Bromley Museum we will help you to uncover many interesting facts about Bromley's past as well as how people lived through the ages. |
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Crofton Roman Villa
(8 Miles)*
The Crofton Roman Villa house was inhabited from about AD140 to 400 and was the centre of a farming estate of about 500 acres. |
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Tunbridge Wells Museum and Art Gallery
(10 Miles)*
Tunbridge Wells Museum and Art Gallery shares the special story of the borough of Tunbridge Wells. |
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Chislehurst Caves
(11 Miles)*
There are over 20 miles of mysterious caverns and passages which have hewn out of the chalk over a period of 8,000 years. |
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Cobham Hall
(11 Miles)*
Cobham Hall is an outstandingly beautiful red brick mansion dating from 1584, which demonstrates an exciting combination of Elizabethan, Jacobean, Carolean and 18th Century styles. |
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Groombridge Place Gardens and the Enchanted Forest
(11 Miles)*
Welcome to Groombridge, a beautiful wealden valley with an incredible 700 year old history. |
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Red House
(12 Miles)*
Those struggling to define the style of the Arts and Crafts Movement of the 1870s should pay a visit to Red House in Bexleyheath. |
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Kent Life
(12 Miles)*
There's so much new to do at Kent's premier heritage farm attraction with 28 acres of fun which includes our timed-daily activities |
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Marle Place Garden and Gallery
(13 Miles)*
Marle Place is a peaceful, privately owned garden with ten acres of formal planting and many more acres of woodland and orchard. |
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Maidstone Museum & Bentlif Art Gallery
(13 Miles)*
This exceptionally fine regional museum housed in Chillington Manor a delightful Elizabethan manor house, boasts a rich and impressive variety of historical objects, fine art and natural history. |
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Boughton Monchelsea Place
(13 Miles)*
Boughton Monchelsea Place is a lovely Elizabethan Manor House, dating from 1567. |
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Eltham Palace
(13 Miles)*
In 1933 Stephen Courtauld - millionaire, war veteran and patron of the arts - looked to the suburb of Eltham as the setting for a breathtaking new home. His vision was to link a modern, fashionable residence to the Great Hall of a medieval royal palace. |
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Bayham Abbey
(13 Miles)*
Come and enjoy this romantic Abbey ruin, set in the picturesque valley of the River Teise, in the heart of the Weald. |
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British Wildlife Centre
(14 Miles)*
In the heart of the East Surrey countryside is the British Wildlife Centre, one of the best places in the country to see and learn about our own wonderful wildlife. |
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The Old Mill
(15 Miles)*
Outwood Windmill, Britain's oldest working windmill, is Listed Grade 1 by English Heritage. It was built in 1665 by Thomas Budgen of Nutfield, and is what is known as a Post Mill. |
Above, you'll find a list of the Tourist Attractions in Seal and things to do in Seal (and nearby) listed on AboutBritain.com.
So if you're wondering what to do in Seal, 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 Seal and the surrounding area - so you need never be short of places to go and things to do in Seal again.
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