Search results: 1 to 12 of 12 products
Centrally located and home of the world famous Sally Lunn Bun (exceptionally light semi sweet bread) and now a living museum where visitors can experience a taste of Bath just a few minutes from the Abbey.
Built in the early 18th century, the mills produced both copper and brass batterywares, using water wheels for power, until 1908 when it was the last remaining battery mill in the country.
The little Saxon church of St. Lawrence could easily have been the first stone building to be erected in England after the Romans left. Built by St. Aldhelm at the end of the 7th century.
This monument commemorates the heroism of a royalist commander, Sir Bevil Grenville, and his Cornish pikemen at the Battle of Lansdown.
Restoration of mainline Somerset & Dorset railway line and Midsomer Norton station as an operational heritage railway & museum.
Scattered across a field roamed by sheep, visitors can wander the field, picnic on the stones, and draw their own conclusions on why the ancient standing stones of Stanton Drew were placed there.
A Neolithic burial mound, 30 metres (100 feet) long, with multiple axial chambers where human remains once lay.
Stourhead House and Gardens on the Wiltshire-Somerset border is the perfect day out for everyone. A breathtaking 18th century landscape garden with lakeside walks, grottoes and classical temples is only the beginning.
Situated behind the Holburne Museum at the end of Great Pulteney Street, Sydney Gardens is Bath’s oldest park.