Shute Barton
Shute Barton is a Medieval manor house dating from 1380 with additional architectural features from later periods. Includes, battlemented turrets, late Gothic windows and a Tudor gatehouse.
Please note that Shute Barton is primarily a holiday cottage and has very limited opening, so please check the National Trust website.
Planning your visit to Shute Barton
Shute Barton, Shute, Axminster, Devon EX13 7PT, United Kingdom
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Shute Barton 7 Day Weather Forecast
Axminster weather forecast from Yr, delivered by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and NRK
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In this 'you may also like' section we attempt to answer what else can do near Shute Barton? Here you have a list by order of being the closest some more beaches, things to see and do, places to eat and upcoming events.
Ducky’s cafe is located on Beer Beach with indoor and outside seating overlooking the fishing boats.
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The Boston Tea Party is a tea room in Honiton in Devon. We have a first-come, first-served service style and don’t offer bookings, but we have plenty of seats throughout the cafe plus our fabulous garden. We’re a breastfeeding friendly cafe, and welcome dogs too.
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Beach: Lyme Regis View: Views across Lyme Bay to Golden Cap. What’s on the menu?: Breakfasts, snacks, sandwiches, salads, homemade cakes, drinks, ice-creams
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Beach: Charmouth Beach View: Located just above the beach overlooking the bay. What’s on the menu?: Snacks, drinks, ice-creams
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Seaton beach is a mile long pebble beach, gently sloping and safe to swim. At low tide you can see some coarse sand patches. At the top of the beach is the Esplanade, a flat paved walk 1,160 metres in length stretching from Axmouth Harbour at the eastern end of the bay to the Chine café towards the western end.
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Beer Beach in East Devon is a very pretty, curved pebble beach and is usually quite busy all year round. The picturesque village of Beer lies around the cove and is an excellent spot for browsing or enjoying a meal or afternoon tea. It’s suitable for swimming, but you’ll share the pebbles with lobster pots and fishing boats, sunbathers, walkers
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Monmouth beach is sand and pebble beach situated to the West of the Cobb and the beaches stretches over 1km away from the town. Monmouth beach is named because the Duke of Monmouth landed here in 1685 in an attempt to get the crown from King James II. Facilities include parking, food, toilets, chalets and beach huts. You also have
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Lyme Regis Town beach sits is a mix of sand and pebbles. More sand exists at the harbour (The Cobb) end of the beach with pebbles on the northern end providing much needed coastal protection. The Cobb end of Town beach is widely known as the setting for ‘The French Lieutenant’s Woman’. Facilities at the beach include parking, toilets, lifeguards
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Loughwood Meeting House is a 17th-century thatched Baptist meeting house. The location is special, this beautiful chapel is set into the hillside and looks out over the rolling east Devon countryside with views of the Axe Valley.
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Lyme Regis lifeboat station was established in 1853 and now operates an inshore lifeboat from the famous Lyme Regis Cobb harbour. Station and shop open daily.
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The Lyme Regis Museum is also known as the Philpot Museum as it was commissioned in 1901 by Thomas Philpot, a relative of the fossil collector Elizabeth Philpot. Elizabeth Philpot befriended Mary Anning when Anning was still a child; despite the almost 20-year age difference the two became close and were frequently seen collecting fossils together. Philpot encouraged the young Anning to read about geology
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The Cobb is a curving sea wall built at the end of the 13th Century to provide safe anchorage. The Cobb is a must to visit on foot with a great view from the end of Lyme Regis and the surrounding coast. Most people picture The Cobb as seen in The French Lieutenant’s Woman with waves crashing over the wall.
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