Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Cantlop Bridge Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Cantlop Bridge

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    15 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    Haughmond Abbey

    Haughmond Abbey

    3.5(2 reviews)
    5.7 mi

    Haughmond Abbey is a pleasant afternoon out in the shropshire countryside. The Abbey and grounds,…read morewhen approached from the road, look relatively small and there does not appear that there will be much to be seen, however first looks are very deceptive. As you enter on your left is a very small but very informative museum. Not many artifacts have been found from around the site but what have, have been well displayed and are suitably detailed on easy to read display boards. The Abbey itself is very impressive (or certainly would have been). There are display boards around the site to detail each aspect of the abbey as you enter into it. The grounds just seem to keep going where many rooms, unable to be seen from the raod, lie behind the remaining imposing structure. In some places the display boards have been replaced by simple signs telling the visitor where they are in the Abbey. This part of the visit could be improved by placing similar visual dispaly boards with artist impressions in more areas around the site. The history of the site unfolds as you walk around and it is easy to understand how the monks who lived in the Abbey led a relatively comfortable lifestyle compared to the country folk around it. Towards the end of the site is a display board detailing the true scale of the Abbey and how recent digs have unearthed a surrounding wall and large gatehouse which would have been the main entrance. It is a shame that this display is not incorporated into the museum to allow you to appreciate the grandeur at the start of the visit as opposed to trying to appreciate it at the end. The site has a small but well equipped visitor shop with protaloo toilets at one side of the site. Better toilets and display boards would make this a five star English Heritage visit.

    Haughmond Abbey is located 3 miles NE of Shrewsbury off B5062. Another fantastic day out…read more It has a lovely picnic area and also able to get get light refreshments. On a lovely day its definatley a good picnic site.

    Photos
    Haughmond Abbey
    Haughmond Abbey
    Haughmond Abbey

    See all

    The Shrewsbury Carriage Parade

    The Shrewsbury Carriage Parade

    5.0(2 reviews)
    4.2 mi

    This is well worth a visit to Shrewsbury to see, even grab a drink and sit outside one of the pubs…read moreon route. The Cariage Parade takes annually and it is usually the first sunday of the month in September. The actual parade is horse drawn carriages, and they travel in convoy from Attingham Park, (3 miles outside Shrewsbury, Attingham Pak is a National Trust Property), the journey continues down the A5, along Abbey Forgate, into the town centre of Shrewsbury into the Quarry, where the carriages and horse can be seen in their full order. A lot of effort goes into this parade, the horses vary in size from Shetland Ponies to Shire Horses, the horseman themselves are all dressed up in their finery. This is the must do, and the best thing its free.

    The Shrewsbury Carriage parade is put on by local members of the British Driving Society. It takes…read moreplace annually at the beginning of September on a Sunday. The exact date can be seen prior to the event on the British Driving Society website under Shropshire. Basically, local people drive their turnout ( a horse(s) and carriage, in convoy from Attingham Park ( a National Trust Property just outside the town), into Shrewsbury to The Quarry, where the Lord Mayor has a chat with participants before they return to Attingham for tea in The Orangery. All of us dress up in our finest and polish the horses and vehicles to perfection. Its a great spectacle. All types of horses from miniature Shetlands to Shires participate and the vehicles could be traditional, dating back 100 years or modern. Most of us drive horses for pleasure. Some compete in local shows, driving trials etc etc. We are very friendly and local people line the street to wave and appreciate the parade. If you are in the area, why not come along and have a look, as well as enjoying the many beautiful places the county of Shropshire has to offer.

    Unfinished Church in St. George's

    Unfinished Church in St. George's

    3.0(1 review)
    12.1 mi

    When I visited the Unfinished Church in St. George's at Duke of Kent St., St. George's GE 05 on…read moreJune 27, 2016, a tour guide drove me past the ruins of the uncompleted church building, which people don't have to pay a fee to go look at and look inside through the arches, and informed me of the history. Parishioners thought a new church needed to be built because the old one was falling apart. As St. George built the new church, events happened that showed them that the new church wasn't meant to be used. The parishioners couldn't agree on the inner designs of the church because of theology differences, they had to divert money from the project to rebuilding a church that was torched by arsonists, they still had a use for the Old St. Peter's church: it continued to serve as a Parish church, and a tornado blew the roof off the new church once it was completed. It was interesting to see a building constructed with a different architectural design than I usually see. I couldn't go inside and people still can't go inside today because the St. Peter's Church closed the inside except for an area where scheduled weddings are conducted so they could get the weathered down interior repaired. The site is for tourists, and the inside is for weddings. It doesn't explicitly state a mission, but from the website, it seems as if St. Peter's Church's intention is for the Unfinished Church to serve as a beautiful piece of history for tourists to look at and for people to have church officiated weddings inside. I rated the Unfinished Church in St. George's a three because a visitor can see what a church from a long time ago looks like, but they can pull up pictures of the church on the internet, and they can't learn much from looking inside through the arches and at the outside. I'd probably give it a higher rating if I could visit it once the interior was repaired. My rating is based on how it functions as an educational historical site. It's a good place to visit if a person wants something to do that's good for most ages. St. Peter's Church is the managing entity. The site succeeded in its mission because I saw other people there when I visited, although I didn't get to look inside, so I don't know if it succeeded with its goal as being a place for weddings. http://www.stpeters.bm/UnfinishedChurch http://www.gotobermuda.com/profile/unfinished-church/1147

    Photos
    Unfinished Church in St. George's

    See all

    Cantlop Bridge - landmarks - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...