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Shropshire

Shropshire is a historic and scenic county in England’s West Midlands, known for its medieval towns, castles, industrial heritage, and beautiful countryside.

Cantlop Bridge

Cantlop Bridge is a historic single-span cast-iron bridge designed and approved by Thomas Telford in 1818, located in Shropshire. It is a Grade II* listed structure and a scheduled monument, now serving as a pedestrian monument with an information board and free access.

historic-town castle roman nature-reserve country-park garden

Wenlock Priory

Wenlock Priory is a historic ruined 12th-century Cluniac monastery in Shropshire, England, featuring extensive visible remains of its monastic buildings and church, alongside Grade II listed topiary gardens, accessible to the public and maintained by English Heritage.

castle garden historic-town

Clun Castle

Clun Castle is a medieval ruined castle in Shropshire, England, known for its historical Norman architecture and significance as a Marcher lord fortress. Now a Grade I listed building, it offers visitors the chance to explore extensive outdoor ruins, including a great Norman keep and remnants of pleasure gardens, managed by English Heritage.

castle historic-town nature-reserve

Moreton Corbet Castle

Moreton Corbet Castle is a ruined medieval and Elizabethan castle located in Shropshire, England. Visitors can explore the historic ruins and the remains of the Elizabethan manor house set within the castle grounds. The site is free to enter during daylight hours and offers a glimpse into medieval fortifications and Elizabethan architecture influenced by Italian designs.

castle historic-town

Stokesay Castle

Stokesay Castle is a well-preserved fortified manor house in Shropshire, England, dating from the late 13th century. It features both medieval indoor architecture and extensive historic outdoor grounds including a moat and gardens. Managed by English Heritage, it offers a rare glimpse into medieval aristocratic life with its original wooden beams, solar block, and ornamental gatehouse.

castle garden stately-home

Boscobel House

Boscobel House is a historically significant Grade II* listed building in Shropshire, known for its role in protecting Charles II after the Battle of Worcester in 1651. Visitors can explore timber-framed house interiors with original and Victorian exhibits, extensive formal gardens, and the famous Royal Oak tree on the grounds.

stately-home historic-town garden farm-park

Attingham Park

Attingham Park is a Grade I listed neoclassical stately home near Atcham, Shropshire, set within 4,000 acres including 640 acres of parkland and gardens landscaped by Humphry Repton. The estate features historical architecture, rare Georgian garden spaces, extensive deer parkland, and offers visitors both indoor tours of the mansion and outdoor exploration of the grounds, with food available onsite.

stately-home garden country-park woodland hill-walk nature-reserve historic-town

Kinver Edge

Kinver Edge is a historic heath and woodland escarpment on the Staffordshire-Worcestershire border, featuring England's last inhabited rock houses open for tours, Iron Age hillforts, and scenic walking and biking trails through diverse natural habitats.

stately-home hill-walk nature-reserve garden historic-town country-park woodland

Benthall Hall

Benthall Hall is a 16th-century English country house in Shropshire, featuring fine oak interiors, historic gardens, and connections to the English Civil War, open to the public seasonally under the National Trust.

stately-home garden woodland country-park historic-town

Sunnycroft

Sunnycroft is a Victorian suburban villa in Wellington, Shropshire, featuring a rare unaltered interior, an elaborate conservatory, and extensive grounds including stables, pigsties, gardens, and a tree-lined avenue. It is owned by the National Trust and open to the public by appointment or on limited occasions.

stately-home garden historic-town country-park

Chirk Castle

Chirk Castle is a historic Grade I listed castle and stately home in north-east Wales, built in 1295 and managed by the National Trust. Visitors can explore both the castle interiors and extensive formal gardens and parkland surrounding the site. The estate also features notable landscape elements such as Offa's Dyke and has historic significance dating back to the Marcher Lords and English Civil War periods.

castle garden country-park woodland hill-walk nature-reserve stately-home historic-town museum

Location

Similar pages
  • Shropshire (free)
  • Shropshire (outdoor)
  • Shropshire (dog-friendly)
  • Shropshire (wheelchair-accessible)
  • Shropshire (organisation~eh)
  • Shropshire (indoor)
  • Shropshire (organisation~nt)

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Last update: 10 June 2026
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