The Manor House
Stay where the Tudors worked towards the Elizabethan Golden Age.
Steeped in history and surrounded by natural beauty, Soulton Hall was built by an important Tudor statesman to protect and enrich in a time when sanctuary and renewal was needed for England. Constructed in a Renaissance code, this place has always been about the sharing and enjoying of culture and the rejuvenation of visitors, holding a cultural memory that reaches back to the age of Erkenwald, London’s Saxon patron saint whose memory the Tudor builder wanted to safeguard.
Concealing the landscape that inspired Shakespeare’s As You Like It, the Tudor House of Old Sir Rowland offers a retreat unlike any other.
Step back in time with carefully curated rooms, offering a glimpse into a different chapter of Soulton’s story. If seeking more contemporary setting, the Carriage House provides a comfortable haven.
Or find a charming retreat in the cottage where Rosalynde “lived low, and content… and drunk without suspicion, and slept without care.”
Stay where the Tudors worked towards the Elizabethan Golden Age.
Rest in the modern rooms of part in the 1780s model farm buildings.
Retreat to the Cottage in Shakespeare’s As You Like It bluebell wood.
The Visitor Information Centre (VIC) can be found within Shrewsbury Museum & Art Gallery, right in the centre of Shrewsbury town. We can help visitors to the town with information on the town, on what there is to see and do, how to get around the county and how to get the most out of […]
We provide tours in a comfortable car or modern coach in Shropshire and surrounding areas for single travellers, couples or pre-organised groups. We cal also provide Walking Tours led by a professional guide. Let us show you around Shropshire, Wales and further afield to reveal hidden treasures. One, two, or three-day Tours based on […]
An 18th-century estate for all seasons with 200 acres of parkland and Regency Mansion. The National Trust’s Attingham Park, one Shropshire’s finest country estate, has been the setting for astutely accumulated fortunes, overspending and financial ruin, a story of love and neglect, and revival and rediscovery. Bequeathed to the National Trust in 1947 by Thomas, […]