spacer image Discounted Hotels

Calderbank Country Lodge
Preston, Lancashire

Bookmark
This Hotel Guide
www.HotelsGuesthouses.co.uk

spacer image Home > England > Lancashire > Preston > Calderbank Country Lodge spacer image
Over 25,000 Hotels
spacer image Book Preston hotel rooms securely online through our hotel accommodation guides. Some of the Preston hotels and guesthouses have been awarded ratings, therefore you can be assured of the quality of Preston accommodation has to offer, you will also be treated to the warmest of welcomes, and true Preston hospitality - a standard in all our Preston hotels accommodation establishments. Enjoy all this, and real value for money awaits you in Preston.

»Home

This Georgian property rests in picturesque countryside on the edge of the Forest of Bowland, midway between Preston and Lancaster. Personally managed by the owners Rowland and Lesley, Calderbank offers friendly service and comfortable accommodation. Bedrooms are excellently appointed, and the restaurant offers superb local produce. A wide range of drinks are available, including locally brewed cask ales. Local attractions include the Harris Museum and Art Gallery in Preston, that houses paintings, sculpture and other artworks that bring to life the history of this region. Blackpool is only 25 miles from the hotel.


Room Rates
Rooms - £60.00 per Room

Awaiting Photo of Calderbank Country Lodge

 Calderbank Country Lodge
 Oakenclough
 Preston
 Lancashire
 PR3 1UL


When would you like to stay?

Rating -


Preston is a city and local government district in North West England. It is the administrative centre of Lancashire, and is on the River Ribble. Preston was granted the status of a city in 2002, becoming England's 50th city in the 50th year of Queen Elizabeth's reign. Preston forms part of a conurbation with Chorley and Leyland which according to the 2001 census had an overall population of 335,000. Of this, 184,836 lived in the Preston urban sub-area: the figure for those living within the city limits is lower at around 130,000. In the mid-12th Century, Preston was in the hundred of Amounderness, in the deanery of Amounderness and the archdeaconry of Richmond. The name of Amounderness is more ancient than the name of any other Wapentake or hundred in the County of Lancashire, and the fort at Tulketh, strengthened by William the Conquerer, shows that the strategic importance of the area was appreciated even then. The location of the city, almost exactly mid-way between Glasgow and London, led to many decisive battles being fought here, most notably during the English Civil War (1643), and the first Jacobite rebellion (1715) which began here. Served by the River Ribble, Preston was one of the principal ports of Lancashire. King Charles I demanded a quarter more ship money than from Lancaster and twice as much as from Liverpool.

 
Andorra - Argentina - Australia - Austria - Bahrain - Belgium - Bosnia and Herzegovina - Brazil - Brunei - Bulgaria - Cambodia
Canada - Channel Islands - China - Croatia - Cyprus - Czech Republic - Denmark - Dominican Republic - Egypt - England - Estonia
Finland - France - Germany - Greece - Greenland - Hungary - Iceland - India - Indonesia - Isle of Man - Israel
Italy - Jamaica - Japan - Kuwait - Latvia - Liechtenstein - Lithuania - Luxembourg - Macedonia - Malaysia - Malta
Mexico - Montenegro - Morocco - Nepal - Netherlands - New Zealand - Northern Ireland - Norway - Philippines - Poland - Portugal
Qatar - Republic of Ireland - Republic of Singapore - Romania - San Marino - Scotland - Serbia and Montenegro - Slovakia - Slovenia - Spain - Sultanate of Oman
Sweden - Switzerland - Taiwan - Thailand - Tunisia - Turkey - United Arab Emirates - United Kingdom - Uruguay - USA - Vietnam
Wales - West Indies - Zuid Africa (South Africa)
Terms & Ratings Explained