Beautiful Inns in Beautiful Places

  • number of bedsNo. beds
  • beaches nearbyBeaches
  • number of delegatesNo. delegates
  • functionsFunctions
  • golf courseGolf course
  • racecourseRacecourse
  • parkingParking
  • parking nearbyParking near
  • pets allowedpets allowed
  • railwaysRailway
  • shopping nearbyShopping
  • wedding serviceWeddings

The Roebuck is a charming 17th century country house set in the beautiful rural location of Forest Row on the A22. Full of olde world charm with its oak beams and real fires to keep you warm on a winters night and its beautiful garden and a patio area where barbecues are held in the summer.

Bournemouth, Christchurch, New Forest and Poole.15 Minutes Away - Gateway to Dorset. The Bridge House is situated on the River Stour in the picturesque Dorset countryside. The hotel is close to both the stunning beaches of Sandbanks and Bournemouth and the unspoilt landscape of the New Forest. This is the perfect place for nature enthusiasts with an abundance of wildlife on the doorstep; swans, Kingfishers, herons, and you could be lucky and spot the otter. Fishing is available on the River Stour.

A visit to The Falcon Hotel is a truly memorable event, both for its food and wine, its beautifully decorated rooms and for its comfortable ambience. Set in the idyllic rural hamlet of Castle Ashby, just six miles south east of Northampton, dating back to the 16th century. The Falcon Hotel is a traditional country hotel with the emphasis on excellent food and service.

If you know little about Oliver Cromwell and want to know more, come to Huntingdon. The Cromwells were a prominent local landowning family and Oliver Cromwell was born here. In keeping with this local tradition, we take pride in the fact that The George, which has also been a coaching inn, was once the home of Oliver Cromwell's grandfather and that the Cromwell Museum is 200 yards from the hotel.

The Cock Hotel rose to national pre-eminence in the great age of coach travel, with as many as 100 coaches a day coming into the Town. The Hotel was the official staging post for the famous Manchester Flier. An original timetable shows that the Flier left London at 8.30am, arriving in Manchester at 5.10am the next day with a 25 minute stop here at the Cock Hotel for dinner. Other travellers staying at the Hotel and the adjacent Bull, vied with each other in the telling of outrageous ‘tales of the road’, from whence the famous phrase a Cock and Bull Story derives.

A Warm Welcome to The Queen's Head Hotel. Milton Ernest is rich in local lore. Before the First World War, a staggering 30 trades and crafts were represented in the village, including a higgler (a breaker of rough stones). Glenn Miller was a known famous visitor. Today, Milton Ernest has the unusual distinction of being bisected by the Bedford