Hotel Facilities
A beautiful hotel curating more than 180 years of history, but utterly modern in outlook. Studley Castle is the perfect setting for a short break exploring and relaxing in rural Warwickshire.
- ✓ Restaurant, bar, lounge
- ✓ Entertainment venue & cinema
- ✓ En-suite bedrooms
- ✓ Free Wi-Fi
- ✓ Indoor pool
- ✓ Daytime activities
- ✓ Live entertainment nightly
- ✓ All chalets on ground & first floor
Littlecote House Hotel
All our holidays to Studley Castle are on a half board basis, you will dine in the Market Kitchen in the Eversham restaurant, which includes breakfast and three-course evening meals with à la carte waiter service.
After dinner you can enjoy the best from the Warner’s entertainment team who put on tribute acts, cabarets and comedy and live shows every night. Our Warner breaks to Studley Castle are packed with a range of day time activities, including, archery, cycling, boules, walking trails, pitch & putt croquet.
Quizzes and games are available to participate in and free WiFi is provided in public areas and after breakfast, meet the award winning Warner entertainments team who provide both fun and laughter by day and night.
There is also a spa on-site, converted from the castle's old riding stables, providing both facial and body treatments while also holding a pool, sauna and steam rooms.
We're experts in creating independent tailor-made tours with bespoke excursions and experiences customised to your group’s needs. Excursions available in this area include:
- ✓ Hill Close Gardens Trust
- ✓ Cotswolds Farm Park
- ✓ Charlecote Park
- ✓ Worcester Woods Country Parke
- ✓ Arrow Valley Country Park
- ✓ Lickey Hills Country Parkk
- ✓ Worcester City
- ✓ Birmingham City
- ✓ Packwood House
- ✓ Coughton Court
- ✓ Morton Hall Gardens
- ✓ Kenilworth Castle and Gardens
- ✓ Stratford-Upon-Avon
- ✓ Wollaton Hall and Deer Park
- ✓ National Justice Museum
If the place you wish to visit is not listed above, just let us know and we will be happy add it into your holiday.
Interesting Facts
- Designed by Samuel Beazley, a renowned theatre architect, in the Gothic Revival style
- In 1903, Lady Warwick purchased the building and transformed it into the Studley Agricultural College for Women to provide horticultural training to daughters of the gentry.
- Requisitioned by the government, it became a training camp for the Women’s Land Army during the First and Second World Wars and remained a women’s-only college for the next 60 or so years.