Things you didn't know about Berkshire

Berkshire is the royal county with links to Mars and Thunderbirds (and rats, moles and pompous toads).

Berkshire

Berkshire

Berkshire is home to the world's largest inhabited castle

Windsor Castle—which earns Berkshire its royal county status—is also the world's oldest castle in continuous occupation. It dates back to the time of William the Conqueror.


Britain's oldest road runs through Berkshire

The Ridgeway is 85 miles long, running between Overton Hill and Ivinghoe Beacon, and is thought to date back to Neolithic times.


How d'you like them apples, Berkshire?

Richard Cox first grew Cox's apples in 1825 in Colnbrook.


England was once governed from Berkshire

When King John died in 1216 and his nine-year old son took the throne, William the Earl of Marshall became his protector and ran the country from his home at Caversham Park, Berkshire.


From Berkshire to Mars

The chocolate bar is made on the Slough Trading Estate.


Thunderbirds were go in Berkshire

The marionettes were filmed in action at the Century 21 Studios in Slough.


The widest brick arch bridge in the world is in Berkshire

Maidenhead's railway bridge was designed by the world-famous engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel.


Berkshire is home to the second best restaurant in the world

According to Restaurant Magazine's panel of 600 judges, The Fat Duck at Bray, owned by head chef Heston Blumenthal, is second only to El Bulli in Roses, Spain.


Berkshire hosts Europe's most valuable horse race

Royal Ascot offers over ?3 million in prize money every day of the annual weeklong meeting.


Diana, Princess of Wales, was nearly buried in Berkshire

Frogmore House, in the grounds of Windsor Castle, final resting-place of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, was the Queen's favoured burial spot for Diana. But her own family intervened and buried her at Althorp in Northamptonshire.


Berkshire—a fine place for messing about on the river

Kenneth Grahame wrote The Wind in the Willows in Berkshire. The inspiration for the children's book were a series of letters from the author to his son, Alastair, which he later turned into a book while living in the Berkshire village of Cookham Dene. The author later died in the Berkshire town of Pangbourne.



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Breaks and days out in and around Berkshire

Yell.com has teamed up with VisitBritain and its national tourism partners to bring you everything you need to plan the perfect day out or short break in or around Berkshire.

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For Berkshire, find ideas for a family day trip, a cultural outing, a weekend getaway with a difference and a comprehensive guide of quality-assured places to stay.

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