fiogf49gjkf0d HARROGATE
- the very picture of genteel Yorkshire respectability - owes its airy, planned appearance and early prosperity to the discovery of Tewit Well in 1571. This was the first of over eighty ferrous and sulphurous springs that, by the nineteenth century, were to turn the town into one of the country's leading spas. Monuments to its past splendours still stand dotted around town, with Harrogate's spa heritage beginning at the
Royal Baths Assembly Rooms
on Crescent Road, built in 1897, where you can still take a
Turkish bath
in the plush, tiled Victorian surroundings (call 01423/556746 for hours; from A?9.50 a session); the public entrance is on Parliament Street. The contemporaneous
Royal Hall
, built as a concert hall, stands across the way at the corner of Ripon Road and King's Road, while just around the corner from the Assembly Rooms stands the
Royal Pump Room
, built 1842, in Crown Place, over the sulphur well that feeds the Royal Baths. The
museum
here (April-Oct Mon-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 2-5pm; Nov-March Mon-Sat 10am-4pm, Sun 2-4pm; A?2) re-creates something of the town's health-fixated past and also lets you sample the water; free
guided walks
leave here several times a week between Easter and October (information from the tourist office). To the southwest, the 120-acre
Valley Gardens
are the venue for the annual Spring Flower Show and Sunday band concerts in summer, while many visitors also make for the
Harlow Carr Botanical Gardens
(daily 9am-6pm or dusk if earlier; A?4.50, A?3 in winter), the main showpiece of the Northern Horticultural Society. These lie one and a half miles out, on the town's western edge; take the B6162 Otley road, or walk beyond the Valley Gardens, through the Pine Woods.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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