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Places of Interest

A selection of the many attractions in Co. Durham...

Sedgefield and the Surrounding Area

Sedgefield is a small town with a solidly agricultural past and a modern country village character. It is one of those places which the locals still call a village with some justification. It is in an area just south of the old coalfield where, as you travel north along the ancient eastern routes from England to Scotland, the Vale of York gives way to the rolling countryside of the magnesian limestone of County Durham. The village itself grew at an ancient cross roads from the time when Roman armies marched north to Hadrian's Wall and today is still an excellent centre for touring the North of England.

Sedgefield hosts a number of village traditions, some old and some new. Find out more about Sedgefield Village...

Durham Cathedral

Visit this magnificent Norman cathedral, completed in 40 years between 1093 and 1133 - a stunning example of early Norman architecture, the shrine of our own St Cuthbert, and a focus of Christian worship in the North East. Together with the castle (formerly the home of the Prince Bishops, now the home of students at the university) it is a World Heritage Site.

Durham Cathedral's website: www.durhamcathedral.co.uk

Raby Castle and Gardens

If you want to visit a real English mediaeval castle, Raby can't be beaten. Once the home of the famous Neville family, Raby now belongs to Lord Barnard, whose family have lived there for 370 years. In the castle you can see fine furniture and paintings, and you can also see how the servants lived. Deer graze up to the moat and you can relax in the beautiful gardens.

Raby Castle’s website: www.rabycastle.com

Crook Hall and Gardens

If you love gardens, walk through Durham City to Crook Hall, a gem often missed by the tourist. It is a private house but still contains a mediaeval hall (full of atmosphere) and a Jacobean room and has been lovingly restored. The gardens include ancient walled gardens ablaze with colour, a modern Cathedral Garden, a Shakespeare Garden and a Silver and White garden, created for the then owner's 25th Wedding Anniversary.

Crook Hall’s website: www.crookhallgardens.co.uk

The North of England Open Air Museum at Beamish

Beamish vividly recreates life in the North of England in the early 1800s and 1900s. A tram will take you to the town with its shops, houses, working pub, sweet factory and bank, or you can instead alight at the farm and watch the pigs and poultry or smell the baking in the old farmhouse kitchen. Or you could take an old bus to the mining village, visit the mining cottages or take a guided tour down the drift mine. You can even ride on a recreation of the first steam railway, or visit the 19th Century Manor House. You will need at least a full afternoon to visit Beamish, preferably a whole day.

Beamish Museum’s website: www.www.beamish.org.uk

The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle.

This French-style chateau houses one of Britain's finest museums, in particular paintings, ceramics, furniture, and textiles.

The Bowes Museum website: www.bowesmuseum.org.uk

Killhope, the North of England Lead Mining Museum

Explore our industrial heritage in this beautiful wild setting, at this very visitor-friendly museum. Guides are on hand to explain the processes of lead mining and you can see how miners lived and worked, where they slept and what they wore. You can actually go down the mine and see the working conditions.

Killhope’s website: www.durham.gov.uk/killhope

High Force, Upper Teesdale

Walk through the woods to England's biggest waterfall, which crashes 70 feet over massive rocks into the River Tees. A short distance away you can walk to the gentler, but no less beautiful, Low Force., or from Bowlees Picnic Area walk to the waterfall at Gibson's Cave.


High Force Waterfall website: www.rabycastle.com/high_force.htm

The North Pennines and Durham Dales

The North Peninnes is England's largest official Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Travelling up the dales of the Wear or the Tees then over some of England's highest roads across the wild open moorland can provide an exhilarating day trip from Sedgefield.

North Pennines website: www.northpennines.org.uk

Find out more about attractions throughout our area: www.visitnorthumbria.com

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