Ambleside, meaning "Shieling" or summer pasture by the riverbank, lies  next to the northern shore of Lake Windermere, it is a small but busy  Victorian town that is a popular spot with tourists, as it is an ideal  location to base yourself to explore the lake district from. 

The town  centre has a host of craft shops, cafe's, guest houses and hotels, and  on a wednesday you will find an open-air Market. One of the building's  in Ambleside is said to be the most photographed building in the whole  of the lake district - Bridge House. This building was originally used  as an apple store, and was ingeniously built directly over Stock Beck on  a stone arch in order to avoid paying any land tax! It is now however a  National Trust Shop after being aquired by them in 1926. Although a  small building it is said that it was once home to a family of eight! It  is also a place that artists love to paint. 
The great English landscape  artist J.M.W Turner (1775 - 1851) painted it. Also, a few miles North  of the town at Grasmere you will find Rydal Mount and Dove Cottage, two  of the homes of the famous English poet William Wordsworth. 































 
 
 
 
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