Food Scene
Beehive Pub Restaurant
The StreetCosy, country pub serving great food and drink.
Six Bells Horringer
The StreetVery close by to House of Wilde. Fantastic pub garden and great, seasonal food.
The White Horse
Rede RoadThe Ickworth Hotel offers a variety of eating options from fine dining, to afternoon tea, to menus designed for families. Very close to House of Wilde - our garden in fact backs on to the Ickworth grounds and provides direct access to the park.
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The Ickworth Hotel
The Ickworth Hotel offers a variety of eating options from fine dining, to afternoon tea, to menus designed for families. Very close to House of Wilde - our garden in fact backs on to the Ickworth grounds and provides direct access to the park.
DOUGH&co Woodfired Pizza Bury St Edmunds
39 Abbeygate StreetLucy's Pizzeria
F O L K C A F É
The DriftWright's
2 CornhillICE Cafe
Perkins RoadNo. 4 Restaurant & Bar
4 Hatter StGreat cafe/ bar attached to cinema. Delicious food served and great staff.
So Bar Bury St Edmunds
Langton PlaceTasty food and friendly atmosphere, great for families.
Carluccio's - Bury St Edmunds
24-26 Auction StGastrono-me
22 Abbeygate StFresh tasting deli
Giggling Squid
21 Abbeygate StFantastic Thai food
The Northgate
Northgate StreetSo Bar Bury St Edmunds
Langton PlaceFrench classics made from great quality, fresh ingredients.
Maison Bleue
30-31 Churchgate StHigh quality food
Wonderful restaurant in the gorgeous village of Barrow. A restored 16th century pub, the Weeping Willow is a local favourite for a celebratory meal or a special night. Modern menu with a relaxing outside seating area.
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The Weeping Willow Pub
39 Barrow HillWonderful restaurant in the gorgeous village of Barrow. A restored 16th century pub, the Weeping Willow is a local favourite for a celebratory meal or a special night. Modern menu with a relaxing outside seating area.
Pub restaurant offering Suffolk ales, global food, and great views.
35mins drive A14 towards Ipswich - on the River Orwell, lovely on a sunny afternoon.
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Butt and Oyster Pin Mill
Pinmill RoadPub restaurant offering Suffolk ales, global food, and great views.
35mins drive A14 towards Ipswich - on the River Orwell, lovely on a sunny afternoon.
Drinks & Nightlife
Luxurious bar in the historic Angel Hotel. Offering 7 different cask ales and beers and a cocktail list inspired by the fables and tales surrounding the hotel and Bury St Edmunds.
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The Angel Hotel
3 Angel HillLuxurious bar in the historic Angel Hotel. Offering 7 different cask ales and beers and a cocktail list inspired by the fables and tales surrounding the hotel and Bury St Edmunds.
The One Bull & Vino Gusto
25 Angel HillSo Bar Bury St Edmunds
Langton PlaceOakes Barn
Saint Andrew's Street SouthThe Apex is a vibrant hub of local activity known for its outstanding acoustics and crowd pleasing performances of everything from rock to jazz and world music.
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The Apex
1 Charter Square StThe Apex is a vibrant hub of local activity known for its outstanding acoustics and crowd pleasing performances of everything from rock to jazz and world music.
The Tavern on St John's
88-89 St John's StOne of the smallest pubs in Britain. Decorated with quirky memorabilia, including a mummified cat.
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Nutshell Pub Bury St Edmunds
17 The TraverseOne of the smallest pubs in Britain. Decorated with quirky memorabilia, including a mummified cat.
Sightseeing
Next to the Abbey Gardens is St Edmundsbury Cathedral, the only Cathedral in Suffolk. Begun at the late eleventh century by Abbot Anselm when he was unable to undergo pilgrimage to the shrine of St James in Compostela, Spain. For this reason the cathedral was known as the Parish Church of St James until the early twentieth century. An ongoing project throughout the centuries, St Edmundsbury Cathedral was the only unfinished Anglican cathedral in England until 2010, when the final phases were completed through the millennium project.
Address: Angel Hill, Bury St Edmunds, Bury Saint Edmunds IP33 1LS
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Kathedrale von St. Edmundsbury
Angel HillNext to the Abbey Gardens is St Edmundsbury Cathedral, the only Cathedral in Suffolk. Begun at the late eleventh century by Abbot Anselm when he was unable to undergo pilgrimage to the shrine of St James in Compostela, Spain. For this reason the cathedral was known as the Parish Church of St James until the early twentieth century. An ongoing project throughout the centuries, St Edmundsbury Cathedral was the only unfinished Anglican cathedral in England until 2010, when the final phases were completed through the millennium project.
Address: Angel Hill, Bury St Edmunds, Bury Saint Edmunds IP33 1LS
Today Bury is perhaps most famous for the Greene King Brewery. Greene King has been brewing beer in Bury St Edmunds since 1799, when Benjamin Greene founded Greene’s Brewery. Greene King now runs over 3,000 pubs and bars across the country but the company still brews its beer using traditional methods.
Tours run daily at the brewery where you can see how real beer is brewed using natural ingredients and traditional brewing methods. The tours are hugely popular with tourists and locals, best of all they end with a tutored beer tasting in the Beer Café.
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Greene King Brewery
Today Bury is perhaps most famous for the Greene King Brewery. Greene King has been brewing beer in Bury St Edmunds since 1799, when Benjamin Greene founded Greene’s Brewery. Greene King now runs over 3,000 pubs and bars across the country but the company still brews its beer using traditional methods.
Tours run daily at the brewery where you can see how real beer is brewed using natural ingredients and traditional brewing methods. The tours are hugely popular with tourists and locals, best of all they end with a tutored beer tasting in the Beer Café.
Parks & Nature
West Stow
Thetford Forest Park
Go Ape Thetford
Simply stunning park. Definitely a must visit.
The history town of Bury St Edmunds town has stretches back to the bronze age. As with much of East Anglia, Bury was occupied by the Romans during the first and second centuries, however in terms of its early history the town was most actively shaped during the Anglo-Saxon period where Bury was one of the royal boroughs of the Saxons.
The king of the East Angles, Sigebert, established a monastery in the town in the seventh century. In the tenth century the monastery became the burial place for King Edmund who was martyred by arrows and beheaded by the Danes. In the early eleventh century the existing monastery was replaced with a Benedictine abbey which became one of the richest and most powerful Benedictine monasteries in England. The shrine of saint Edmund drew many to the Bury St Edmunds Abbey and the town evolved around this source of income and the secondary economies it ignited. The abbey grew in wealth until its suppression during the reformation.
Today the stone remains of the Abbey are a family day out with a fantastic children’s playground to play in and lots of space to relax.
Address: Angel Hill, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, IP33 1LS
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Abbey Gardens
22 Mustow StSimply stunning park. Definitely a must visit.
The history town of Bury St Edmunds town has stretches back to the bronze age. As with much of East Anglia, Bury was occupied by the Romans during the first and second centuries, however in terms of its early history the town was most actively shaped during the Anglo-Saxon period where Bury was one of the royal boroughs of the Saxons.
The king of the East Angles, Sigebert, established a monastery in the town in the seventh century. In the tenth century the monastery became the burial place for King Edmund who was martyred by arrows and beheaded by the Danes. In the early eleventh century the existing monastery was replaced with a Benedictine abbey which became one of the richest and most powerful Benedictine monasteries in England. The shrine of saint Edmund drew many to the Bury St Edmunds Abbey and the town evolved around this source of income and the secondary economies it ignited. The abbey grew in wealth until its suppression during the reformation.
Today the stone remains of the Abbey are a family day out with a fantastic children’s playground to play in and lots of space to relax.
Address: Angel Hill, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, IP33 1LS
Nowton Park
Bury RoadArts & Culture
Winner of the Suffolk’s Family-Friendly Museum of the Year 2017, Moyse’s Hall Museum is a great place to uncover the history of Bury St Edmunds with the children.
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Moyse's Hall Museum
CornhillWinner of the Suffolk’s Family-Friendly Museum of the Year 2017, Moyse’s Hall Museum is a great place to uncover the history of Bury St Edmunds with the children.
Opposite the Brewery is Bury’s 200-year-old Theatre Royal, the last working Regency playhouse in the country and the third oldest theatre. First built in 1819, the theatre was restored to its Regency design in 2007, and as a Grade 1 listed building is the only theatre in the National Trust portfolio. The theatre puts on several in-house plays per year as well as hosting touring shows. The annual pantomimes are always a fantastic family day out!
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Theatre Royal station
Opposite the Brewery is Bury’s 200-year-old Theatre Royal, the last working Regency playhouse in the country and the third oldest theatre. First built in 1819, the theatre was restored to its Regency design in 2007, and as a Grade 1 listed building is the only theatre in the National Trust portfolio. The theatre puts on several in-house plays per year as well as hosting touring shows. The annual pantomimes are always a fantastic family day out!
Great little cinema with very comfy chairs and sofa's.
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Abbeygate Picturehouse
4 Hatter StGreat little cinema with very comfy chairs and sofa's.
Shopping
Javelin
37-38 Abbeygate StLoft & Spires
61 CornhillThe Parsley Pot
17 Abbeygate StAnna
12 Abbeygate StEssentials
Tesco Express
1-2 Horringer RdWaitrose & Partners
Robert Boby Way