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The Inn at Fossebridge, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
Contact Information

Description
The Inn at Fossebridge is immersed in 300 years of history… as a coaching inn on the Fosseway and as a hostelry named after wealthy landowner Lord Chedworth.
Indeed the Inn had opened by 1759 and was then known at Lord Chedworth’s Arms, a name recalled in the wonderful old bar that still exists today; the name was changed to The Fossebridge Inn in the early 19th century.
It is today a beautiful quintessential Cotswold retreat, with wonderful accommodation, grounds and fine food. The Inn is within an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, Cheltenham and Cirencester, the delightful capital of the Cotswolds, Burford and Stow-on-the-Wold. You will find many pretty hamlets and villages nearby which seem to look today as they did a few centuries ago.
The Private Dining Room with a grand antique mahogany table for 14 guests & open log fire and the adjacent Garden Room (up to 70 guests) can be used separately or as one room and offers a perfect and elegant entertaining space for wedding receptions, family celebrations, birthdays, christening's, parties or business meetings. There is direct access to the the grounds and the large sash windows overlook four acres of beautiful lawns at the heart of which is the lake; the haunt of Kingfishers, Herons and all manner of wildlife.
Again the Jenkins family has paid great attention to detail in choosing elegant carpets, wall coverings and the furniture. They also have an exceptional ability to lay out a room in all sorts of configurations to suit the specific needs of guests. |
Fact File
As a wedding venue The Inn at Fossebridge is perfect… either for a Civil Ceremony, celebrate a smaller wedding within the dining room, or a larger event in the grounds. A marquee set in the Cotswolds landscape and overlooking the lake, trees, streams and the River Coln is a stunning setting.
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Location
| The Inn at Fossebridge is situated in a dip on the A429 (Fosse Way), 6 miles north of Cirencester at Fossebridge, between the Gloucestershire towns of Cirencester and Northleach. |
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