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  Home > United Kingdom > England > Devon > Attractions
 
 
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Plymouth Barbican   
The Barbican area of Plymouth is a historical place which is well worth a visit for an interesting walk. It is linked into the city’s nautical heritage. Fishermen operate daily from the Barbican, and there is a multi-million fish market.


Plymouth Gin Blackfriars Distillery   
You wouldn’t guess it at a glance, but this is one of Plymouth’s oldest buildings. Long thought to be a former friary (hence the name), it is now seen as a Tudor merchant’s house, converted to a gin distillery in 1793.


Plymouth Guildhall   
This monument to Victorian civic pride is the last in a series of Plymouth guildhalls, each larger than the one before. It was designed by local architects Alfred Norman and James Hine in the then-fashionable Gothic style.


Porlock Weir   
Porlock Weir lies about 1.5 miles west of Porlock and is a small settlement which has grown up around the harbour, much of the land and buildings being in the ownership of the Porlock Manor Estate.


Princess Gardens   
Princess Gardens were opened in 1894. They were named after Princess Louise, the daughter of Queen Victoria, who visited the town on 6 May 1890. The gardens were designed in a typical Victorian style with elaborate fountains and ornate shelters, which face Torquay harbour.


RHS Garden Rosemoor   
Set deep in the lovely North Devon countryside, RHS Garden Rosemoor is a garden of national importance. You do not have to be a keen gardener to appreciate the beauty and diversity of Rosemoor, which was gifted to the RHS by Lady Ann Berry in 1988.


Riverside Road   
This charming old-world street leads from the main road down to the harbour at Lynmouth. Lyndale Bridge in the distance was completely destroyed in the disastrous floods of 1952 and many buildings along this road wererebuily after serious damage.


Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery   
Exeter’s largest museum hosts a number of fascinating displays from information about its Roman past to artifacts from the colonial era. Many areas of the collection are of national and international importance including an outstanding ethnographic exhibition with found objects from around the world including the Amazon and Africa.


Saltram   
Saltram stands in a wooded landscaped park on the outskirts of Plymouth. The house with original contents was created between 1740 and 1820. It features two of Robert Adams finest rooms, an exceptional collection of paintings by Reynolds and superb furniture and ceramics.


Seaton Tramway   
Enjoy a ride through the beautiful Axe Valley between Seaton and Colyton on Devon’s unique narrow-gauge Seaton Tramway. Purpose built and restored tramcars give panoramic views of the rolling Devon countryside and the River Axe, teaming with scores of wading birds and other wildlife.


     
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