100 Prettiest Villages in Engand
#43
Guest
Posts: n/a
I will be staying in Stanton in the Cotswolds this June. Have stayed there two other times. It is a wonderful medieval village, have also been to Great Tew, Upper and Lower Slaughter, Burton on Water (they have a miniature village that you can visit, it is a replica of the actual village) The Cotswolds are wonderful, Morton on Marsh, Stow on the Wold, Guiting Power and on. Enjoy
#44
Guest
Posts: n/a
Just returned from a 3 week trip to England. Enjoyed reading everyone's favourites - there are so many favourite places to see! My suggestion is that you savour fewer - just walk about and enjoy and dream. A few favourites of mine that were not mentioned are, Bibury in the south Cotswolds, and Cartmel in the Lake District. I would like to second the remarks about Suffolk - add Thaxted to the list! Enjoy!
#46
Guest
Posts: n/a
Just back from three weeks in Britain, including the much-mentioned Cotswolds, which are picture perfect.<BR>However, for a northern village, I'd suggest Hovingham, north of York. The Worsley Arms hotel is classic. <BR>Also, in Northumberland, Seahouses for a stay in a fishing village (at the Old Ship Inn) which has a wonderful pub and a lounge overlooking the water. <BR>Or go just north of Seahouses -- past Bambury Castle -- to Holy Island, also known as Landisfarme. You can only go along the road to the island when the tide is out. Castle and abbey ruins and a fascinating walled garden, nice restaurants, etc. Wonderful!
#47
Guest
Posts: n/a
Northumberland has got some very pretty seaside villages, a little bit more south and you would have come accross Alnmouth a very attractive village by the sea, with lots of history. And even more south you would have had a real treat - Staithes and Robin Hoods Bay with its cobbled streets leading to the sea, quaint fishermen houses nearly touch each other they are so close. Pretty Whitby is in the vicinity (where Captain Cook was brought up, and where Dracula came ashore).
#53
Guest
Posts: n/a
There's some lovely villages near to the main Cotswolds trail but completely unspoilt- such as Ilmington (ggod restaurant/pub The Howard Arms) and Armscote (excellent pub The Fox and Goose)<BR>I'd also recommend Pickering in North Yorkshire; Robin Hood's Bay and Skipton and Chipping in Lancashire
#56
Guest
Posts: n/a
Roger:<BR>Stamford is deffinitely worth visiting: it stood in for Middlemarch for the tv adaptation and rightly so: it is an unspoilt jewel of a Georgian country town. Honey coloured stone, soaring chusch steeples and tiny lanes and alleys. The George is a great pub/hotel and my old employers used to send all viviting Americans there to view one of our businesses on the basis that they would be so made up for the place they'd invest more money in the company!<BR>Bourne on the other hand is nothing to write home about but is also unspoilt and well of the beaten track. Nearby is the village of Grimethorpe which sounds awful but is most picturesque with a pretty castle/country house. Which reminds me... one of the finest country houses in all England is on the doorstep of Stamford - Burleigh.<BR>Stamford is definitely, definetely worth a visit for any tourist!
#58
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 434
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
This is reply 57. Mike wants to know 100 of the prettiest villages in England.<BR><BR>Gorey in Jersey in pretty. However, it is not in England. It is in the Channel Islands.<BR><BR>Wool in Dorset was cute. I only saw 1 shop. There is nothing there except a small Methodist church with a stained glass window. There is a train station.