Aynsome Manor is a country house hotel in Cartmel, Cumbria, northwestern England, in the Lake District. It is set in the Vale of Cartmel, with views of a Norman priory, meadows and woods to the south.

1. History and architecture

The author Samuel Taylor claimed that there is not ancient record to prove that Aynsome had ever been a formal manor, but notes that the surrounding area and River Ea was involved with grinding corn in medieval times. The hotel is in the Georgian style, in a building which was built in 1735, but was originally 17th century. For many years the house was in the possession of the descendants of William Marshall, the Earl of Pembroke. It later came under the ownership of the Varley family. In 1842, John Remington, vicar of Cartmel, built a fine dining room to entertain the Duke of Devonshire. Distinguishing features of the dining room include the panelling, bay windows and ornate moulded ceiling. It has 12 bedrooms, two of which are situated in a cottage, which was converted from a 16th-century stone stable. The hotel was awarded the Cesar Award by The Good Hotel Guide in 1998.

1. Restaurant

The restaurant has been awarded a rosette by AA who notes its "starters of guinea fowl and leek terrine wrapped in Cumbrian ham served with apricot and sultana chutney, and mussels steamed with garlic, parsley, cream and white wine" and main courses [which] might include "rich, gamey venison loin in damson and gin jus plated with a sage and onion-flavoured polenta cake". As of 2016 the chief chef is Gordon Topp.

1. References
Nearby Places View Menu
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Broughton East

Broughton East is a civil parish in the Westmorland and Furness Unitary Authority of Cumbria, England. In the 2001 census the parish had a population of 173, increasing at the 2011 census to 196. The parish includes the village of Field Broughton and the hamlet of Green Bank at grid reference SD379803. The Parish sits at the southern border of the Lake District National Park. The name Broughton may have come about due to the area being home to a brook or stream.
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1.0 km

Cartmel Racecourse

Cartmel Racecourse is a small national hunt racecourse in the village of Cartmel, now in the ceremonial county of Cumbria, historically in Lancashire. Until 1969, the two day Whitsun meeting was Cartmel's only fixture, when an August Bank Holiday Monday meeting was introduced. In 1974, a Saturday programme was added to the new meeting, making a total of four days' racing. Nine racedays are now held each year, starting on the Whit Holiday weekend at the end of May and ending on the August Bank Holiday weekend in August. The three-day May race meeting actually takes place over five days – allowing a day off for racegoers to enjoy the Lake District countryside in between each day at the races. The racegoers arrive so early in the day and leave so late that, unlike most racecourses, there is not time to clear up and turn the racecourse around for consecutive days racing. The two-day July meeting (taking place over three days, with a day off in-between) features the most valuable race at Cartmel, the Cumbria Crystal Hurdle Race, which is worth over £40,000. The August race meeting features the Cartmel Cup (a hurdle race) and the Cavendish Cup (a steeplechase). Although the racecourse is considered to be small, it often has the third-highest average attendance of any jumps track in Britain after Aintree and Cheltenham – the largest crowds can be just over 20,000 on one day. The visitors gather in the centre of the racecourse which is bisected by the finishing straight. On one side of the straight is a very large fairground and on the other the Parade Ring and Winners' Enclosure. There is a small grandstand, but in general most of the facilities at Cartmel are temporary. The village shops are a short walk from the track and a visit to the village is often considered to be a significant part of a day at Cartmel races. Cartmel Racecourse is about 1-mile (1.6 km) round, with six fences, and is noted as having a four-furlong (804 metre) run-in on the Steeplechase course, the longest in Britain. The run in on the Hurdle track is slightly less than 2 furlongs (402 metres). All winning connections receive a Cartmel Sticky Toffee Pudding to take home. The origins of racing at Cartmel are rather obscure, with some stories suggesting that the meeting first started with mule races organised by medieval monks from Cartmel Priory to make their journeys across the sands to Lancaster more interesting. There are records of racing for the Innkeepers' Stakes of £15 and the Tradesmen's Stakes of £30 in 1856. Hound trailing and foot races were also a part of the programme at that time. At the meeting in 1869 there were not enough horses entered for the races, so there was great interest in the human runners, including a T. Dowrie, who won three races. In 1875, the foot races were abolished and the meeting held under Grand National Rules. The course was supported by local landowners. Until World War II, it was a very small course featuring primarily amateur jockeys, but in the second half of the 20th century the racing programme was expanded and professionalised. Cartmel Racecourse and its surrounding land have long been owned by the Holker Estate, where the Cavendish family still reside. Hugh Cavendish became a Director on the Board of Cartmel Racecourse in 1974 and in 1998, bought out the management team to develop it further under the guidance of his allies at Aintree. This has seen the course go from strength-to-strength, and it continues to grow in stature and service year-on-year. Cartmel was the site of the Gay Future 'coup' in 1974 that involved switching horses before a race and relying on the lack of communications at the course. The most popular racehorse at Cartmel in recent seasons is Soul Magic, who has won at the track on seven occasions - prior to the 2014 racing season.
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1.1 km

L'Enclume

L'Enclume (pronounced [lɑ̃.klym], French for "the anvil") is a Modern British restaurant opened in 2002 in Cartmel, Cumbria, England, run by the chef Simon Rogan and his partner, Penny Tapsell. L'Enclume received a rating of 10 out of 10 five times in The Good Food Guide and was named their top restaurant for the fourth consecutive year in the 2017 guide, and placed second in the 2018 guide. It has received three Michelin stars and five AA Rosettes.
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Cartmel Priory

Cartmel Priory church serves as the parish church of Cartmel, Cumbria, England (formerly in Lancashire).