188 acre park.
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188 acre park.
This house with its beautiful Elizabethan garden is where Shakespeare lived after he left London to retire as a country-gentleman, from 1597 until his death in 1616.
This sixteenth-century, thatched-roof cottage was the home of Anne Hathaway, Shakespeare's sweet-heart and wife.
The ancestral home of John Harvard, founder of America's most famous University.
A classical visit to the Cotswolds, the center of Shakespearean theater, should include taking in a play at this famous theater and a backstage tour to get an intriguing insight into props and costumes.
This historic Tudor-style house with a scenic walled garden is where Shakespeare's daughter Susanna lived with her husband, Dr. John Hall.
Located on the banks of River Avon, this is considered one of England's most-visited Parish Churches and the site where William Shakespeare was baptized in 1564 and buried in 1616.
Located in front of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre and alongside the River Avon, this delightful park and garden area has a holiday feel with open-air performers.
Take a scenic ferry trip across the River Avon to the waterside park.
Make your own brass rubbings from a collection of Medieval and Tudor brass plaques, England's unique heritage that reflect the knights and ladies, scholars, merchants and priests of the past.
childhood home of Shakespeare's mother
Take a trip back to sixteenth-century Tudor England with a visit to the site where William Shakespeare was born, and gain insight into what life was like when the famous bard was a child.
A self-guided walking trail through the heart of Shakespeare's Stratford-upon-Avon that includes many important attractions such as Shakespeare's Birthplace, Hall's Croft, Anne Hathaway's Cottage, and Nash's House & New Place.
