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Tower Cottage
Watlington, Oxfordshire

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We are a friendly, family-run guesthouse situated in the Chiltern Hills, catering to tourists and business visitors alike. Although we are located in the heart of the Oxfordshire countryside we are just one mile from the M40 motorway. We offer a relaxed stay in our three bedrooms, one of which has en suite facilities. Two of the rooms have double beds; the third has twin single beds. The Chiltern Hills are a beautiful, unspoilt part of the country. They lie close to the north-west of London and yet retain their rural character. The government designated them as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in 1965, recognising their place as part of the finest countryside in England.


Room Rates
Single - £40.00 per Room
Double - £50.00 per Room
Family - £65.00 per Room

Photo of Tower Cottage

 Tower Cottage
 Chinnor Road
 Aston Rowant
 Watlington
 Oxfordshire
 OX49 5SH

 Tel: 01844 354676
 Fax: 01844 355999

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Watlington in Oxfordshire, UK, is a small market town of just under 3,000 inhabitants, located in the Chiltern Hills south of Oxford and north of Reading, Berkshire. The M40 motorway, which links London to Birmingham, is only two and a half miles from the town centre. The famous walking route, the Icknield Way (an ancient route from Cromer in Norfolk to Avebury in Wiltshire), passes the town along the dry, high ground to the east, and Watlington is a convenient location to begin walks along it, with Watlington Hill and its "White Mark" a popular stopping point. The Watlington White Mark was originally designed by local squire Edward Horner, who felt that the Norman church of St Leonard, when viewed from his home, would appear more impressive if it looked as though it had a spire. He had this unusual folly cut into the chalk of Watlington Hill in 1764. It is 270 feet tall and 36 feet wide. Aside from this the most striking feature of Watlington is its market hall in the centre of the town, which was built in 1665. The Watlington area is likely to have been settled at an early date, encouraged by the proximity of the Icknield Way. The placename means 'settlement of Waecel's people' and this indicates occupation from around the 6th century. A 9th-century charter mentions eight 'manses' or major dwellings in Watlington and the Domesday survey of 1086 identifies the area as being an agricultural community valued at £610. The Town also has an Anglo-Saxon Church which forms an integral part of the town's architecture and functionality.

 
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