There aren’t many Lake District hotels which offer you a stay at a location which has such a deep, rich history as Low Wood Bay Resort & Spa.
When you come to stay with us here, it’s worth spending some time exploring the building and the extensive grounds around the hotel.
The original farm and hostelry at Low Wood Bay dates back to 1705 and over the following century, ownership changed hands and property extensions were made. When the Kendal and Windermere railway opened in the mid-1800s, Low Wood Hotel was rebuilt to meet the increasing demand for accommodation.
With such a depth of history and renewal, it follows that from time to time, discoveries are made on the site, whether it’s a piece of old décor or an artefact from a bygone age coming to light as a result of renovation, extension work or routine maintenance.
English Lakes Hotels took over the running of the hotel in 1953 and so it’s been apt that in the year of our 70th anniversary, a substantial horticultural find from the Victorian era has come to light and been brought back into use for our guests to enjoy.
An ornate limestone rockery and water garden has been discovered at the south end of the hotel during pruning work and the removal of overgrown foliage around the venue’s grounds.
Believed to have been originally created sometime in the mid to late 1800s, the water garden features an extensive limestone rockery with three pools – a larger one and two smaller ones linked by mini waterfalls. It was discovered by the hotel grounds team whilst clearing overgrown paths under 12 inches of leaf mould and debris.
The most likely date for its original construction is at or around the hotel’s rebuild and re-opening in 1859 after a major fire in 1856. It is thought that the water garden was buried and lost most probably during the second world war while the hotel was closed. When it re-opened after the war, there would not have been the staff to look after the grounds as there had been in its earlier heydays of the 1930s.
The hotel grounds team has installed a new water circulation system for the ponds and repaired leaks from them but other than that, the water garden is intact and as originally found with no stones moved from where they were uncovered.
The venue’s connections to tourism in the Lake District date back to the beginning of the 1700s. We talk to Anne Cook (nee Berry) about how her family’s entry into the hospitality industry all started.