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England

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London

Local Places of Interest and Activities

London Bridge London has the greatest concentration of major attractions in Britain and offers an amazing variety of places to visit. One of the best ways to view the city is to take an Open Top Bus Tour allowing you to visit your selected attraction and make as many stops on each route as you wish.

Buckingham Palace The City Sightseeing Tour is highly recommended for overseas visitors. It covers the best of London's sights with an informative commentary in a choice of languages. Attractions include Buckingham Palace, Changing of the Guard, Fortnum & Mason store, Royal Academy of Arts, Piccadilly Circus, Eros statue, The National Gallery, Nelson's Column & Trafalgar Square, Downing Street, Big Ben & The Houses of Parliament, London Bridge, St. Paul's Cathedral, Tower Bridge, The Tower of London and Westminster Abbey.

London Eye Currently the most popular attraction in London is the British Airways London Eye. The world's largest observation wheel offers a spectacular way to take in over 55 of London's most famous landmarks in just 30 minutes. You can combine your flight on the Eye with a 45 minute circular cruise on the Thames. Departing from the pier next to the Eye the commentated tour takes you from the Houses of Parliament to the Tower of London and back to the London Eye.

Tours to take of the Surrounding Area

Windsor Castle Take a trip out of London to visit Windsor Castle. Situated in nearby picturesque Windsor, Windsor Castle is an official residence of The Queen and the largest inhabited castle in the world. Visitors can enjoy a look around the State Apartments furnished with fine paintings, porcelain, sculpture and armour. Other highlights include Queen Mary's Dolls House and St Georges Chapel, scene of many royal weddings. The beautiful castle gardens are also worth looking at, part of which were transformed by the award-winning garden designer Tom Stuart-Smith to celebrate the Golden Jubilee.

Kent

Local Places of Interest and Activities

Canterbury Cathedral Canterbury - Visit the famous cathedral city of Canterbury. Situated in one of the most attractive corners of rural Kent and has been welcoming visitors for over 2000 years. Canterbury today is a delightful mixture of architecture, history, arts and culture, museums, shops of every description, visitor attractions and good restaurants and pubs. Canterbury's World Heritage site, one of only 13 in the UK, includes Canterbury Cathedral, St. Augustine's Abbey and St Martin's Church.

Deal in Kent Deal & Sandwich - Spend the day along the eastern shores of the Kent coast. Make sure to visit the world famous White Cliffs of Dover. The cliffs make a delightful contrast with the picturesque narrow streets at Deal and Sandwich's medieval quayside. Deal's ancient maritime flavour can be experienced if you take a walk through the old part of town, while over in Sandwich, the winding streets and ancient buildings are a reminder of the time hundreds of years ago when this was one of England's most important sea ports.

Leeds Castle Leeds Castle - About six miles southeast of Maidstone, stands Leeds Castle, situated on two islands in a lake, formed by the River Len. It has been described as "the loveliest castle in the world." While that claim might be open to some debate, it is certainly a beautiful building, well worth seeing. Constructed in the twelfth century to be an impregnable stronghold, it became known as "Lady's Castle" because of who occupied it. Its royal residents include Eleanor and Margaret, the wives of Edward I, Philippa of Hainhault, wife of Edward III, Catherine de Valois, Henry V's wife, Catherine of Aragon, first (but not last) wife of Henry VIII, and Elizabeth I, who was imprisoned here, for a time, before her coronation. The gatehouse with its barbican and drawbridge are the most fortress-like features of the castle. The rest, looks like what it was chiefly used for, a residence.

White Cliffs of Dover The White Cliffs of Dover - To the east of Dover five miles of countryside and coast are owned by the National Trust. Langdon Cliffs overlook the Straits of Dover and are an excellent place to watch the world's busiest shipping lanes. There is a visitor centre, known as 'The Gateway to the White Cliffs', with a coffee shop and displays about the cliffs. The chalk cliffs, up to 300 feet (100 m) high in places, and are made up of millions of small sea creatures and coral from the bottom of an ancient tropical ocean, the chalk is porous, soft and easily worn by the action of the waves. The chalk downland on top of the cliffs is very rare. Many of the plants pre-date the last Ice Age and are adapted to the thin chalk soils and traditional grazing management. Many plants are almost unique to this part of Kent.

Battle of Britain Museum Kent Battle of Britain Museum - Situated on the historic airfield at Hawkinge, about 3 miles inland from Folkestone on the A260, the Museum's original 1940 buildings, some of which still bear the scars of war, contain the worlds largest collection of authentic Battle of Britain relics and related memorabilia. The Museum is the oldest established Battle of Britain Museum and has been open to the public since 1971, the majority of the exhibits having been recovered in the late 1960's and early 1970's.

Chartwell House Chartwell House - The family home for over forty years of Britain's famous wartime Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill and his wife Clementine, Chartwell owes its attraction not only to its historical links but also to the beauty of its surroundings. Visitors are welcomed to a house which remains very much as it was when Churchill lived there, with daily newspapers, fresh flowers and the dining room set for afternoon tea. The furnishings will evoke memories for older generations, while many items in the house will bring history to life for younger visitors. There are also many personal reminders of the great man himself, ranging from family photographs and memorabilia, uniforms and insignia to his extensive library. In the lovely gardens visitors can wander round lawns and terraces with spectacular views over the Weald of Kent.

 

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