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Northamptonshire

Towns & Villages

Northamptonshire

TOWNS & VILLAGES

 

Brackley D1

Brackley

  Brixworth B2 Brixworth
  Corby A3 Corby
  Daventry C2 Daventry
  Desborough B3 Desborough
  East Haddon C2 East Haddon
  Flore C1 Flore
  Higham Ferrers B4 Higham Ferrers
  Irthlingborough B3 Irthlingborough
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  Market Harborough A2 Market Harborough
  Northampton C2 Northampton
  Oundle A4 Oundle
  Raunds B4 Raunds
  Rothwell B3 Rothwell
  Rushden C3 Rushden
  Scaldwelll B2 Scaldwell
  Silverstone D2 Silverstone
  Stoke Bruerne C2 Stoke Bruerne
  Thrapston B4 Thrapston
  Towcester D2 Towcester
  Wellingborough C3 Wellingborough

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Northampton

Northampton

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Adjacent region - WEST MIDLANDS OF ENGLAND Adjacent region - SOUTH EAST ENGLAND Cambridgeshire - excluding Cambridge City Brackley Tourist Information Brixworth Tourist Information Corby Tourist Information Daventry Tourist Information Desborough Tourist Information East Haddon Tourist Information Flore Tourist Information Higham Ferrers Tourist Information Irthlingborough Tourist Information Kettering Tourist Information Market Harborough Tourist Information Northampton Tourist Information Oundle Tourist Information Raunds Tourist Information Rothwell  Tourist Information Rushden Tourist Information Scaldwell  Tourist Information Silverstone Tourist Information Stoke Bruerne Tourist Information Thrapston Tourist Information Towcester Tourist Information Wellingborough Tourist Information

 

NORTHAMPTON

Northampton Guild Hall - Photo © Ian Rob
Northampton Guild Hall - Photo: Ian Rob CCL
 

Most of this vibrant county town was destroyed by fire in 1675 but it was quickly rebuilt and laid out around one of the largest market squares in England. Afterwards, the writer Daniel Defoe described it as ‘the handsomest and best built town in all this part of England’.

It dates back to Saxon times and lies on a curve of the River Nene. The town’s beautiful Guildhall is considered a gem of Victorian Gothic architecture, but it is only one of many fascinating old buildings.

Once the main centre for the manufacture of both boots and shoes, Northampton’s Central Museum boasts one of the largest collections of footwear in the world. Its exhibits include Queen Victoria’s wedding slippers, Margot Fonteyn’s ballet shoes and an enormous boot worn by an elephant that took part in 1959 in a recreation of Hannibal’s remarkable crossing of the Alps. During the English Civil War, the town’s shoemakers made 1,500 pairs of shoes for Cromwell’s army, a fact that later led a vengeful Charles 11 to destroy its castle and town walls.

 

Northampton Town Centre - Photo © Ian Rob
Northampton Town Centre - Photo: Ian Rob CCL

A small terraced house at No. 78 Derngate is the creation of Charles Rennie Mackintosh, the celebrated Scottish architect. His last major commission, it was his only work in England. Nearby is Sulgrave Manor, ancestral home of George Washington, while Canons Ashby was built by the family of the poet John Dryden in 1551.

Queen Eleanor's Cross - Photo © John Apperley
Queen Eleanor's Cross - Photo: John Apperley CCL

Five churches survived the fire of 1675 and one, the 12th century round Church of the Holy Sepulchre, imitates one found in Jerusalem. Hassling House - built around 1620 - and 16th century Welsh House also survived the flames.

On the outskirts of the town is an Eleanor Cross, which was built by Edward 1 in memory of his wife whose body rested in Northampton on its way from Nottingham to London for burial. The cross is one of only three that have survived from a total of 12 along the route.

Nine miles from the town is the 800-acre Pittsford Water, a reservoir famous for fishing, boating and sailing.

The town stages a number of annual festivals, most notably a month-long celebration of music and the arts each June, the world famous Annual Balloon Festival in August, and the St Crispin Street Fair in October.


Further information:
Northampton Hotels, Guesthouses and B&B Accommodation
Northampton Cottages, Apartments and Self Catering Accommodation
Northampton Camping and Caravan Sites

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