Cheshire Bed And Breakfast at Trafford House Farm Offers The Ideal Solution for holidays in the UK.The Traditional English guest house with English hospitality.
This idyllically placed Bed And Breakfast In Cheshire makes for the perfect base to visit places of interest in the Cheshire and surrounding area. Below are just a few of the places to see from around the area that are worth a visite for Day Trips.
Arley Hall is a fine example of an early Victorian Jacobean style
building.
The original hall was built in 1486 by Piers Warburton and the Cruck barn and other
outbuildings are dated from that same period.
The present hall and chapel were built by Rowland Egerton - Warburton between 1832 and 1845 in the
Victorian - Jacobean style.
Each of the main rooms in the Hall has its own character and charm. There is fine plaster work and
paneling, a magnificent library and historic family furniture, pictures and porcelain.
With its ancient history and over 100 acres of gardens and parkland makes this worth a visit.
Home of the Legh family since 1315.Great hall 1450/1505.
Adlington Hall is one of England's
finest country homes, its past can be traced as far back as 1040 when the Legh family of Adlington
decided on the site for a hunting lodge in Macclesfield Forest. The present structure, dates back
to 1315, and incorporates both Medieval and Tudor architecture, further wings and rooms having been
added down the centuries.
Bramall Hall is surrounded by 70 acres of
beautiful parkland, Bramhall Hall is a superb
example of a Cheshire Black and White
timber-framed manor house,
dating from the 14th century.
Around 1070 the Bramale estates were given by
William the Conqueror to Hamo de Masci, the first Baron of Durham Massey.
In the 12th century it passed from the Masseys
to Mathew de Bromale (believed to have been a relation). It remained
in this family until the late 14th century when it passed to the Davenports
through marriage. It remained within the Davenport family for a further
500 years.
On the death of William Davenport in
1869 the Hall was passed to his son John William Handley Davenport. It
was then leased to Wakefield Christy, a member of a well-known Stockport
hatting firm. When the lease expired the contents were sold and the
Furniture dispersed of. The Hall was now owned by a Manchester property
development firm and remained empty until 1883 when it was purchased by
Charles Henry Nevill.
Tatton Park one of England's
finest historic estates.
Magnificent parkland,
beautiful gardens.
Tatton Park spans 2000 acres, with 1000 acres of deer park and 50 acres of gardens.
The Egerton family were the owners of Tatton for nearly 400 years but today it is one of the National
Trusts most popular attractions. The park is home to red and fallow deer as well as many other types
of wildlife and the animals at Home Farm.