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Brackley Town Hall and Market Place - Photo:
Andrew Smith
CCL |
With an
early 18th century town hall built by the Duke
of Bridgewater and a tree-lined market place,
this mainly Georgian town has an impressive
past. It once stood on the coaching route to
London and had no less than 30 inns. The first
draft of the Magna Carta also originated here. |
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The local
Church of All Saints is something of an unusual
attraction in Brixworth. Dating back to the days
when the Saxons ruled Northamptonshire, it sits
imperiously on top of a hill and is one of the
finest and largest in England. |

All Saints Church, Brixworth - Photo:
Alan Simkins
CCL |
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Corby Boating Lake - Photo:
Nigel Cox
CCL |
Lying on
the edge of Rockingham Forest, the steel town of
Corby dates back at least to the 8th century when
Danes settled here. These strangers introduced the
bizarre tradition of the Pole Fair, which still
takes place once every 20 years. It involves
readings of the Royal Charter – granted by
Elizabeth 1 in 1568 - at special toll gates around
the town, followed by a carnival. Anyone who fails
to pay a toll is carted off to the stocks.
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The
town became famous in the mid-20th century
when a Scottish company moved here to open a
steelworks and exploit local deposits of iron
ore. The ore has been mined for many centuries
and royal furnaces existed even at the time of
Edward the Confessor.
Rockingham Castle stands nearby on the summit of a
hill over the River Welland. With stunning
gardens, it dates back to the reign of William the
Conqueror.
Corby is also well placed for visits to Brigstock
Country Park, Kirby Hall and the important nature
reserve of King’s Wood. Nearby Deene Park House is
a sprawling Georgian mansion set in beautiful
gardens. |

The main entrance to Rockingham Castle -
Photo:
Brian Coleman
CCL |
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View towards Daventry Country Park across the
Reservoir - Photo:
Ian Rob
CCL |
Located
close to the Warwickshire border, this small
town with its own moot hall has a long and
impressive history. On the 635ft Borough Hill
are impressive earthworks which once formed
the boundaries of one of Britain’s biggest
Iron Age hill forts. Even Roman artefacts have
been found on this site.
During the English Civil War the Royalist army
camped in the area of the fort prior to their
ill-starred attempt to defeat the Roundheads
at the Battle of Naseby in 1645. Daventry was
the headquarters of Charles I and legend has
it that the king slept at the Wheatsheaf Inn.
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In the 19th
century the town occupied an important position on
the main road from London to Ireland and the
north-west. Today’s attractions include Daventry
Country Park and the Braunston Marina.
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View towards Daventry Country Park across the
Reservoir - Photo:
Ian Rob
CCL
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Located
close to the Warwickshire border, this small town
with its own moot hall has a long and impressive
history. On the 635ft Borough Hill are impressive
earthworks which once formed the boundaries of one
of Britain’s biggest Iron Age hill forts. Even
Roman artefacts have been found on this site.
During the English Civil War the Royalist army
camped in the area of the fort prior to their
ill-starred attempt to defeat the Roundheads at
the Battle of Naseby in 1645. Daventry was the
headquarters of Charles I and legend has it that
the king slept at the Wheatsheaf Inn. |
In the 19th century the town occupied an important
position on the main road from London to Ireland
and the north-west. Today’s attractions include
Daventry Country Park and the
Braunston Marina.
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This small
market town prospered as a spinning and weaving
centre in the 17th century using local wool and
flax. Yet it has a long, illustrious history
dating back into prehistory. Bronze Age urns have
been found here while the so-called ‘Desborough
Mirror’ is now in the British Museum. At 13th
century St Giles Church is part of an Anglo-Saxon
stone cross and a Tudor rood screen. The Old Manor
House was reputedly owned by one of the Gunpowder
Plot conspirators. |

Rushton Hall - Photo:
Kate Jewell
CCL |
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East Haddon Main Street - Photo:
Anthony Wornum
CCL |
This
village is surrounded by some of Northamptonshire’s
most picturesque countryside and is full of pretty
stone cottages. It’s the perfect location for
exploring further afield, lying close to Daventry. |
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This
pretty, quiet village on the River Nene has a
unique charm. It is replete with narrow streets
and alleyways. There are a few thatched cottages
and many more houses made of brown ironstone or
creamy limestone. |

The Grand Union Canal at Flore - Photo:
Ian Rob
CCL |
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Higham Ferrers Market Square - Photo:
Kokai
CCL |
Containing
many fine old buildings, the village of Higham
Ferrers also has an impressive market square and
was the birthplace of Henry Chichele who became
the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1414. Bede House,
which Henry established, adjoins the ancient
parish church of St. Mary the Virgin which boasts
a 170ft crocketed spire; it also has fascinating
brasses dating from the 13th century. In the
centre of Higham Ferrers is a medieval market
cross dating from 1280. |
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Although it possesses a
rich history, Irthlingborough is best known
today as the home of both Rushden and Diamonds
Football Club and Dr Martens Shoes, the latter
representing a continuation of the footwear
industry for which Northamptonshire is famous.
A local cross with a 13ft shaft dates from the
13th century and is said to have been used as
the standard “pole” for measuring agricultural
land. St Peter's Church, dating to the 14th
century, is unusual in having a porch with
doors sited at the four cardinal points. |

Church of St. Peter at Irthlingborough -
Photo:
Geoff Pick
CCL |
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Lying on
the banks of the River Ise, this one-time hub of
the woollen trade prospered even more in the 19th
century when it turned its attention to the
manufacture of footwear. Oddly, it also became
famous for supplying doctors with powdered stone
used to stop bleeding.
The town is dominated by a magnificent 178ft spire
on the Church of SS Peter and Paul. Other
significant old buildings include the Manor House
Museum and the Alfred East Art Gallery.
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Boughton House - Photo:
John Stolarski
CCL |
Boughton House – known as the ‘English Versailles’
- is just a few miles outside Kettering. Owned by
the family of the Duke of Buccleuth since 1528, it
contains numerous major art treasures.
Wicksteed Park, which was built here in 1921, was
the United Kingdom’s first leisure park and
remains a popular family attraction to this day.
Among its many features are a lake and a narrow
gauge railway.
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This hugely
attractive Leicestershire town, blessed with an
unusually wide main square, has been a key market
centre since the early part of the 13th century.
Despite industrial growth, there are still many
fine Georgian buildings here. The most famous is
the town’s old timbered grammar school. Built by
Robert Smythe in 1614 it is raised above wooden
pillars so that pedestrians can walk beneath it.
The Church of St Dionysius dates back to the 13th
century and has a broach spire so typical of
spires in Northamptonshire. The town pioneered the
making of liberty bodice undergarments in the
early part of the 20th century. |

Market Harborough Main Street - Photo:
Colin Smith
CCL |
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Northampton Guild Hall - Photo:
Ian Rob
CCL
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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. |
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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
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.
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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. |
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An ancient
and tranquil market town, Oundle is surrounded on
three sides by the River Nene. Its 13th century
church has a remarkable 200ft spire and is a local
landmark. The town dates back to Saxon times and
has many narrow streets and intimate alleyways.
The Talbot Inn was rebuilt in 1626 with stone from
nearby Fotheringhay Castle, the place where Mary
Queen of Scots was beheaded in 1587. Cotterstock
Hall, a 17th century manor house possessing
splendid gardens, is where the 17th century poet
and dramatist John Dryden penned many of his
Fables.
Oundle is well-known for its ancient public school
- endowed in 1556 by one-time Lord Mayor of London
William Laxton - and is has become a popular
yachting centre. |

St Peter's Church - Photo:
Chris Bamber
CCL |
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St. Peter's Church, Raunds - Photo:
Will Lovell
CCL |
An ancient
town, Raunds dates back at least to Roman times.
Excavations have also unearthed evidence of
Anglo-Saxon and medieval buildings. The 13th
century St Peter’s Church has impressive medieval
wall paintings depicting the parable of the seven
deadly sins and a superb broach spire. The town is
most famous, however, as the home of the British
Army boot. |
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An historic
market town, Rothwell has a large number of
springs once considered to have healing
properties. In the Middle Ages, Rothwell had a
town wall and gates, a nunnery and the unusually
long parish church of Holy Trinity, which today
houses a huge collection of skulls and thigh
bones.
An annual fair is staged when the bailiff of the
Lord of the Manor rides round the town on
horseback reading the town’s charter accompanied
by a guard of halberdiers and a brass band.
Several buildings here were financed by Sir Thomas
Tresham, grandfather of one of conspirators of the
Gunpowder Plot. He lived at Elizabethan Rushton
House where the Catholic rebels met in the
grounds.
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The Market House, designed by Thomas Tresham -
Photo:
Andrew Pickness
CCL |
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St. Mary's Church, Rushden - Photo:
Colin Mitchell
CCL |
Rushden lies in the east
of Northamptonshire and developed since the
late 19th century through the manufacture of
footwear. The birthplace of the poet and
novelist H.E. Bates (1905-74), creator of
‘Darlings Buds of May’, it has an impressive
church spire. Rushden Hall stands in a public
park and was originally the residence of John
of Gaunt who acted as head of the government
during the final years of the reign of Edward
lll. |
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This tiny
village in the predominantly rural district of
Daventry has a population of less than 300 people
and dates back to the Domesday Book. It has a
traditional village green while its 15th century
church, St Peter and St Paul, has a number of
unusual features. It was largely restored in the
mid-19th century. Nearby is Althorp, the
Elizabethan ancestral home of the Spencer family
and the late Princess Diana.
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Silverstone Racing Circuit - Photo:
Peter Roberts
CCL |
This is the
home of British motor racing and hosts the British
Grand Prix. Other motor sports staged here include
the British Touring Car Championship and the
British Rally Sprint Championship. The circuit
also offers the opportunity for ‘ordinary’ drivers
to go for a spin. |
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This
picturesque village, often referred to as the
prettiest canal village in the country, stands on
the Grand Union Canal, which later runs through
the haunted, two-mile Blisworth Tunnel. Its
Waterways Museum is appropriately located on the
canal’s towpath and explores the fascinating
history of Britain’s canal system and its
importance to landlocked Northamptonshire as a
transportation network. |

The Stock Bruerne Locks and Waterways Museum -
Photo:
Martin Clark
CCL |
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Church of St. James at Thrapston - Photo:
Will Lovell
CCL |
Tranquil
Thrapston lies at the crossroads of two Roman
roads and a crossing over the River Nene. It has
long been an important market town and was granted
a charter by King John as long ago as 1205.
Located on the edge of Rockingham Forest, it has a
number of lakes offering visitors plenty of
opportunities for sailing and fishing. Buried in
the 13th century parish church of St James is Mary
Washington, an ancestor of the first American
president, George Washington. The church also
contains a stone tablet bearing the arms of Mary’s
husband, Sir John Washington. The design of the
USA’s national flag, the Stars and Stripes, is
based on the tablet. |
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This is one
of the oldest towns in England and straddles the
Roman road of Watling Street. In fact, not long
after the road was built the Romans created a
settlement here named Lactodorum.
In the 18th and 19th centuries Towcester was a
vibrant coaching town and one of its coaching
inns, the 16th century Saracen’s Head, was visited
by the fictional Mr Pickwick in Charles Dickens’
‘Pickwick Papers’.
The 13th century parish Church of St Lawrence is
built on top of a Roman building and contains a
rare collection of chained books. On the outskirts
of the town is Silverstone’s racecourse and
race-car circuit. |

St. Lawrence's Church at Towcester - Photo:
Andrew Smith
CCL
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A living statue in front of the Tithe Barn -
Photo:
Kokai
CCL |
This
fascinating market town in the Nene valley has a
long and illustrious history dating back to the
6th century. The poet John Betjeman described St
Mary’s Church, designed by Sir Ninian Comper, as
‘the finest modern parish church in England’ while
14th century All Hallows Church has fine examples
of medieval craftsmanship.
During the reign of Elizabeth 1 Sir Christopher
Hatton, the Lord of the Manor, sponsored Sir
Francis Drake's expeditions. In return Drake
re-named one of his ships ‘Golden Hind’ after the
Hind Hotel. Oliver Cromwell stayed at the hotel on
his way to the Battle of Naseby in 1645.
Other significant local buildings include a 15th
century tithe barn and 17th Century Croyland
Abbey. |
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