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Rural pumping station supplying water to Weymouth for 150 years. Displays trace the history of water supply in the Dorset area.
Originally a sacred circle of the Stone Age, the Romans later turned the Rings into a 'Coliseum' where 13,000 spectators could watch gladiatorial combats.
Old Crown Court appearing as it did at the trial of the Tolpuddle Martyrs in c1834. Cells and stocks below court, only open to public as part of guided tour (please call for pricing information and tour options). Children under 16 go free.
Victorian house designed by Thomas Hardy and his home from 1885 until his death in 1928.
The finest and largest Iron Age hill fort in Europe.
Thomas Hardy was born here c1840 and wrote 'Under the Greenwood Tree' and 'Far from the Madding Crowd' here.
Grade I Listed mediaeval and Elizabethan house. It has magnificent carved oak panelling, splendid plaster ceilings, grand fireplaces and unique stone great stairs.
A monument erected in c1844, in memory of Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy, flag captain of HMS Victory at the Battle of Trafalgar. The car park is not National Trust.
Part of an extensive 4000-year-old Bronze Age cemetery.
The Museum tells the stories of Devonshire and Dorsetshire Regiments (including the 11th, 39th and 54th of Foot and the County Yeomanry ) and those who served in them, spanning nearly 325 years of history.