Ascott House
UK National Trust garden and property previously in the ownership of the Rothschild family. Includes contact information. Buckinghamshire, England.
Bleak House Museum
Holiday home of Charles Dickens located in Broadstairs, Kent.
Breamore House & Museum
Elizabethan manor house completed in 1583 by the Doddington family and purchased in the early 18th century by Sir Edward Hulse, whose family remained there for the next 250 years. Located in Breamore, Hampshire, England.
Charles Dickens' Birthplace Museum
House in Portsmouth, England into which famous writer Charles Dickens was born.
Croft House Museum
A Shetland croft of the 19th century, comprised of a house, steading and watermill. Lerwick, Shetland.
Eastgate House
Home of the Charles Dickens Centre and museum dedicated to the writer. Rochester, England.
Fairfax House
Located in York, England, Fairfax House is home to the famous Noel Terry collection.
Firle Place
East Sussex home to the Gage family for more than 500 years.
Harewood House
English country estate offers tours of its state rooms, art collections, and gardens. Includes a virtual tour, events, programs, hours, admission rates, and directions to the location in Leeds.
Sand Historic House
Historic house and garden, situated in the picturesque regency seaside resort of Sidmouth, England.
Scone Palace
The ancient Crowning Place of the Kings and Queens of Scotland was at Scone Palace, near Perth.
Sudley House
Home of Victorian ship owner, merchant and art collector George Holt and his family. Displays include eighteenth and nineteenth British paintings. Liverpool, England.
The Dickens House Museum
Dickens's 19th century home in London, now preserved as a historic house museum.
The Handel House Museum
18th century house where George Frideric Handel lived for 36 years until his death in 1759. Restored to reflect the life and times of the composer. Hours of operation and directions to London location.
The Sherlock Holmes Museum
Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson lived at 221b Baker Street between 1881-1904, according to the stories written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.