Penshurst Place - Described as “the grandest and most perfectly preserved example of a fortified manor house in all England. The 11 acres of walled gardens are as old as the original house with walls and terraces laid out in the Elizabethan era - Tonbridge - Viscount De L'Isle - Disabled & Pushchair friendly but some restrictions for wheelchairs see website
www.penshurstplace.com

 

Quebec House - Childhood home of General James Wolfe, victor of the Battle of Quebec (1759) - National Trust - Westerham - restricted wheelchair access please see website
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/quebec-house

 

Red House - Iconic Arts and Crafts home of William Morris - writer, artist, craftsman and socialist - National Trust - Bexleyheath - partly accessible please see website
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/red-house

 

Riverhill Himalayan Gardens - Discover world-class British sculpture, and learn about Riverhill's fascinating history, with its links to Darwin and the Great Plant Hunters, with over 170 years of continual planting and gardening, creating a rich and valuable plant collection for visitors to enjoy there is also a cafe and shop - family-owned and family-run The Riverhill Cafe and Shop and Walled Garden are accessible for wheelchairs but please note there are no disabled toilet facilities and the site has steep gradients and twisty paths.
www.riverhillgardens.co.uk

 

Scotney Castle - Country house, romantic garden, 14th century moated castle - all in a beautiful wooded estate - National Trust - Tunbridge Wells - partly accessible please see website
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/scotney-castle

 

Secret Gardens of Sandwich - At the heart of this stunning Kent attraction stands the Grade I-listed manor house, The Salutation, which was designed by famous English architect Sir Edwin Lutyens. Lutyens also devised the three-and-a-half acres of ornamental gardens with the help of Gertrude Jekyll - we have no disabled access info for this site
www.the-secretgardens.co.uk

 

Sissinghurst Castle - The legendary poet and writer, Vita Sackville-West, with her diplomat and author husband, Harold Nicolson, began the transformation of the land at Sissinghurst Castle in the 1930s - National Trust - Disabled & Pushchair friendly / baby changing some restrictions for wheelchairs see website
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/sissinghurst-castle

 

South Foreland Lighthouse - A landmark of the White Cliffs, the Victorian lighthouse was built to warn mariners of shifting sands and guide them through the Strait of Dover. A place of innovation and science, the lighthouse was the first to display an electric light anywhere in the world - National Trust - Dover - restricted wheelchair access please see website
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/south-foreland-lighthouse

 

Squerryes Court - 17th century manor house which has been in the Ward family since 1731 - Westerham - we have no disabled access info for this site
www.squerryes.co.uk

 

Stoneacre - Medieval yeoman's house and garden - National Trust - Maidstone - partly accessible please see website
www.nationaltrust.org.uk/stoneacre

 

Temple Manor - Part of a manor house of the Knights Templar, built in about 1240, with a fine first floor hall displaying traces of wall paintings - English Heritage - Strood we have no disabled access info for this site
www.english-heritage.org.uk

 

Upnor Castle - rare example of an Elizabethan artillery fort was begun in 1559 and redeveloped in 1599-1601, to protect warships at Chatham dockyards - English Heritage - Strood - Disabled friendly / facilities restricted wheelchair access see website
www.english-heritage.org.uk

 

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