B and Bs in Clipsham

Beech House at The Olive Branch
Main Street
Clipsham
Rutland

LE15 7SH
Website

Write a review
Book Now

Beech House is a small hotel just 2 miles off the A1 offering luxurious bed and breakfast style accommodation. At the end of a tree lined country lane in the delightful pale-stone village of Clipsham in the tiny county of Rutland. Beech House is across the road from The Olive Branch pub and has six beautifully furnished suites and bedrooms all with en-suite bath or shower rooms. The rooms have been individually decorated using both traditional and contempory colours and fabrics mixed with antique furnishings. The elegant antique beds are dressed with soft Egyptian cotton bed linen and duck down duvets and pillows. All the rooms have a television, dvd player, broadband internet connection, Roberts digital radio and tea and coffee trays.

All the rooms at Beech House are non smoking.
Bathrooms are modern with large baths and powerful showers, along with luxurious bath towels, comfy robes and toiletries by the The White Company.

Breakfast is served in the Barn at The Olive Branch, where you can choose anything from a Mango and Raspberry Smoothie to a Full English made with bacon, sausages, black pudding and eggs all from the local farm.

Details

Ratings/Awards: AA 4 Stars

Price per Room:

Double: From £80
Single: From £65 - Single occupancy
For an instant Currency convertor Click here

Facilities

Parking
Tea/Coffee Making Facilities
No Smoking Rooms - All Rooms
Tourist Board Inspected
TV in Rooms

local taxis | local restaurants | local pubs

This page viewed on 12,788 occasions since 14th November 2006

Brit Quote:
This is the first age that's ever paid much attention to the future, which is a little ironic since we may not have one - Arthur C Clarke
More Quotes

On this day:
First True Canal in Britain Opens - 1761, Punch Magazine launches - 1841, Royal Family Adopts Windsor Name - 1917, Tsar Nicholas and Family Killed - 1918, Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act Gains Royal Assent - 2013
More dates from British history

click here to view all the British counties

County Pages