The tour starts at the war memorial beside St Thomas' Church, where Norman overlords once used religion as an instrument of power. You'll follow the medieval grid that still defines Lymington today, visit the Angel Inn courtyard where a churchwarden ran a lucrative smuggling operation, and hear stories of French Royalist troops billeted during the Revolution. The tour ends at Fishermen's Quay, where the river that gave Lymington its reason for existing still flows, and where the Essex Regiment embarked for Normandy on 3rd June, 1944. Along the way you'll uncover the story of Captain Arthur Phillip, who left from this quay to found Australia's first colony, and discover General James Wolfe's last night in England before winning Canada from the French.
This tour starts at War memorial. Before arrival, please install the mobile app and use the code provided on your confirmation ticket. Detailed starting point instructions are available after downloading.
Tour ends at Fishermen's Quay.
Pass the Church of St Thomas the Apostle beside the war memorial, where Norman overlords established a place of worship that served as an instrument of power over the town's earliest inhabitants. Discover how this commanding hilltop position anchored the medieval street plan that still shapes Lymington's layout today.
Explore the St Barbe Museum and Art Gallery, housed in a building whose history is tied to the wealthy St Barbe banking family, who helped found one of England's earliest National Society schools on this very street. Learn how the fortunes built by Lymington's merchant class — through salt, trade, and finance — shaped the town's civic and educational life for generations.
Stroll past the Lymington Community Centre, occupying a site that once formed part of the town's active commercial and civic core along the medieval High Street. Discover how the original burgage plot measurements from the 1250 town layout survive almost intact in the street patterns and property boundaries still visible here today.
Walk into the courtyard of the Angel Inn, where a respectable churchwarden ran one of Lymington's most lucrative smuggling operations, funnelling tea, brandy, and lace past malleable customs officers. Explore how Angel Yard served as the nerve centre of a smuggling network that thrived in plain sight within this tightly knit Georgian market town.
Pass Stanwell House Hotel, a Georgian townhouse that once served as the home of a local merchant where General James Wolfe spent his last night in England before sailing to win Canada from the French. Marvel at how this quietly elegant facade conceals a building that witnessed one of the defining moments in the history of the British Empire.
Stroll down to the Ship Inn near Fishermen's Quay, where the river that gave Lymington its reason for existing still flows to the sea. Discover how this stretch of waterfront saw Captain Arthur Phillip depart to join the First Fleet at Portsmouth, and where the men of the Essex Regiment embarked for the Normandy landings on 3rd June 1944.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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