Weddicar
Travel Guide
Visit Weddicar

Keswick Country House Hotel

Lake District Castle Inn

Armathwaite Hall Hotel

Peel Place Noddle

Muncaster Cottages

Apartment 6
Popular places to visit
The Beacon
You can spend time exploring the galleries in The Beacon during your trip to Whitehaven. Savor the top-notch restaurants and lively bars while in town.
Fleswick Bay
Why not spend a lazy afternoon at Fleswick Bay during your trip to Whitehaven? Amble around the area's waterfront or visit its churches.
The Rum Story
You can spend an afternoon exploring the galleries in The Rum Story during your trip to Whitehaven. While you're here, you can savor the lively bars.
North Beach
Why not spend a lazy afternoon at North Beach during your trip to Whitehaven? Amble around the area's waterfront or visit its churches.
West Cumberland Hospital
Though West Cumberland Hospital might be what brings you to town, perhaps you'll have a chance to explore more of Whitehaven while you are here.
Whitehaven Castle
Whitehaven Castle is just one of the places to see in Whitehaven, so why not enjoy the other things to explore during your travels? Stroll along the waterfront or visit the churches while you're in the area.
- Scafell Pike
- Lodore Falls
- Derwentwater
- Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway
- Catbells Lakeland Walk
- Muncaster Castle
- Lake District Wildlife Park
- Honister Slate Mine
- Skiddaw
- Derwent Pencil Museum
- Theatre By The Lake
- Solway Coast
- Whinlatter Forest Park
- Wast Water
- Wasdale
- Castlerigg Stone Circle
- St. Bees Beach
- Crummock Water
- Isel Hall
- The Beacon
- Threlkeld Quarry and Mining Museum
- Keswick Museum and Art Gallery
- Lake District Coast Aquarium
- Watendlath Tarn
- Dodd Fell
![Near site of Cleator Moor West station, 1986, Believed to be a northward view along the course of the former Cleator & Workington Junction line, which was built, along with various other lines, for transporting haematite iron ore from the rich mines in the area to the iron- and steel-works in the Workington and Harrington Disticts. For 100 years from the 1860s this area, nowadays almost reclaimed by Nature, had been heavily industrialised and honeycombed by railways: the remnants of spoil-heaps from the iron and coal mines can be seen on the horizon. [I was not entirely sure exactly where I was when I took this photograph, nor am I very familiar with the complexity of the former railways of West Cumberland, so would welcome further discussion about it!]](https://images.trvl-media.com/place/4607/2961878a-d481-4eb6-bedd-f36687cee09b.jpg?impolicy=fcrop&w=512&h=288&q=medium)


