Holmfirth

Best known as the setting for "The Last of the Summer Wine", the BBC's longest-running comedy series, Holmfirth is a charming small town of stone-built cottages in the Holme Moss area of the Peak District. It is prettily situated among the Pennine hills of the Holme Valley in West Yorkshire, England, at the confluence of the Holme and Ribble rivers.

Holmfirth is ideally located in central Yorkshire, which spans three National Parks — the Yorkshire Dales, the North Yorkshire Moors and the Peak District, in addition to the untamed moorland of Bronte Country, the Howardian Hills and the Yorkshire Wolds. West Yorkshire in particular is a unique part of the country to visit, with a fantastic combination of the old and the new in such close proximity. Transport links in the region are some of the best in the country due to the industrial and mining heritage of the area, making it easy to fill each day of your visit with as much, or as little, activity as you fancy, with minimal planning required in advance.

Just a few select examples of the many attractions of the West Yorkshire region includes: the Brontë Parsonage Museum, Harewood House, the Middleton Railway working steam railway line, the Thackray Museum of medical history (which is a particularly popular attraction with children), The Alhambra Theatre, Bradford Cathedral, St. Leonards Farm Park, Pontefract Castle, and the Lightwater Valley Theme Park & Zoo.

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B Madina
  • 14 Westgate

    Honley

    Holmfirth, HD9 6AA

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