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Campden Hill House is located in the village of Ilmington, the highest village in Warwickshire. It is neither listed, nor situated in the Conservation Area, and has undergone extensive and sympathetic refurbishment that showcases its many period features and includes rewiring, replumbing, and reroofing, and the garden has been fully relandscaped. The property is thought to date back to the early 1800s and may at one time have had a thatched roof. The house is set in a beautiful position with stunning views across the valley behind.
Lansdowne House is a substantial and imposing Grade II Listed family home dating back to the late 18th Century with later additions. The property is beautifully located at the western end of Sheep Street with off-street parking and vehicular access to the main gardens situated off Darlingscote Road. The property has evolved over the years with the central stone cottage and the barn added to Lansdowne House to create the accommodation on offer. The main part of the house is built of brick with a slate roof and the former cottage and barn, of stone and a slate/tile roof. There are numerous period features such as original pane sash windows, high ceilings, exposed ceiling and A-frame timbers, attractive fireplaces, traditional wooden doors and architraves, and stairwell balustrades. The numerous bathrooms are finished to a good standard with marble and vintage-style fittings.
It is rumoured that Dick Whittington started his journey to London from Whittington House, hence the name. Whittington House is a substantial and highly elegant detached house built of Cotswold stone, dating back to the mid-15th Century with later additions in the 18th Century, originally part-thatch and retaining many of its original features such as flagstone floors, exposed oak beams and attractive open fireplaces and window seats.
The barn conversion has highly versatile accommodation with beautifully landscaped gardens