
Accommodation in Burley
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ASHURST CLICK HERE
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BROCKENHURST CLICK HERE
BURLEY CLICK HERE
CADNAM CLICK HERE
DIBDEN PURLIEU CLICK HERE
ELING CLICK HERE
EMERY DOWN CLICK HERE
EVERTON CLICK HERE
FAWLEY CLICK HERE
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HIGHCLIFFE CLICK HERE
HINTON CLICK HERE
HORDLE CLICK HERE
HURN CLICK HERE
HYTHE CLICK HERE
LANDFORD CLICK HERE
LYMINGTON CLICK HERE
LYNDHURST CLICK HERE
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MINSTEAD CLICK HERE
NEW MILTON CLICK HERE
NOMANSLAND CLICK HERE
OWER CLICK HERE
REDLYNCH CLICK HERE
RINGWOOD CLICK HERE
ROMSEY CLICK HERE
SWAY CLICK HERE
WINSOR CLICK HERE
WOODGREEN CLICK HERE
WOODLANDS CLICK HERE
Updated: January 24, 2012
What's New:
Golfing Mini-Breaks

The New Forest has many Golf Courses. We have put together a selection of new forest accommodations that cater for the Golfing enthusiast and their Families. Many are keen Golfers themselves and I know of at least One professional golfing family that are new forest bed and breakfast hosts.
Updated: December 14, 2011
B&B? DID YOU KNOW?
You Are Missing a Massive Market
Today there are more people looking for accommodation in the New Forest via a Lap Top PC, Tablet PC, iPad and other mobile devices such as Android Mobile Phones. Our site is the ONLY New Forest Accommodation Portal to have pages designed to cater for all those emerging markets.
THERE IS NO POINT in having "interactive maps" or "images" that display when you hover your mouse over the link.
THEY CANT READ IT! They can ONLY respond to a "click" and the biggest seller, the Apple iPad doesn't even have Flash.
THIS SITE automatically reads the users device and delivers a page that they can read and gives click links to help those that need to view in another format.
YOU ARE missing thousands of potential visitors on those other portals, such as businessmen on-the-move. One of the few sectors that can still afford bed and breakfast.
New Forest Accommodation - Burley
ABOUT Burley New Forest, Hampshire, UK.
Burley is located towards the western edge of the New Forest, 5 miles (8.0
km) south-east of the town of Ringwood. The village is fairly scattered, and
apart from the village centre, there is Burley Street to the north; Bisterne
Close to the east; and the Mill Lawn area to the north-east. Burley has a post
office, newsagents, butcher’s shop, and village stores, as well as tea rooms,
antique shops, art galleries and gift shops. The village still practices the old
tradition of commoning, allowing animals to graze on the open Forest, and ponies
and cattle roam freely around the village. Burley is home to a football club and
a cricket club. Burley Golf Club can be found to the southeast of the village.
The village is surrounded by the open heathland of the New Forest, containing a
complex of woodland, heathland and acid grassland, shrub and valley bog,
supporting a richness and diversity of wildlife. Burley Fire Station is thought
to be the only fire station in the country with a cattle grid at the entrance.
People have lived in the Burley area since prehistoric times. At least 23 Bronze
Age barrows are known in the Burley area. The site of an Iron Age hillfort can
be seen just to the west of the village at Castle Hill.
There is evidence of Saxon occupation as the name Burley is composed of two
Saxon words 'burgh', which means fortified palace, and 'leah', which means an
open meadow or clearing in a wood..
Burley is not specifically mentioned in the Domesday book of 1086, but the entry
for nearby Ringwood may well refer to Burley when it mentions lands in the
forest with "14 villagers and 6 smallholders with 7 ploughs; a mill at 30d; and
woodland at 189 pigs from pasturage."
Burley was part of the royal lands of the New Forest. By the beginning of the
13th Century the family of de Burley was firmly established here. Richard de
Burley held the estate from Edward I who gave the village of Burley and Manor of
Lyndhurst as dowry to his second wife Margaret, sister of Philip IV of France.
The manor is said to have belonged to the Crown down to the time of James I.
In 1852 the manor passed into the possession of Colonel Esdaile who pulled down
the old manor house and built a new one. Further changes to the building have
been made since that time, and the manor house is now a hotel.
There was a watermill belonging to the manor of Burley, which ceased operating
around 1820. The mill is commemorated in names of Mill Lawn and Mill Lawn Brook,
but the only building which survives is the grist house in the grounds of Mill
Cottage.
2 miles (3.2 km) to the north-east of the Burley village, lies Burley lodge, the
history of which dates back to the 15th century. It was part of the lands of the
"bailiwick of Burley" which was held in the 18th century by the Paulets, Dukes
of Bolton and Marquesses of Winchester.
The first known church in Burley was the calvinistic Burley Chapel erected in
1789. The ecclesiastical parish of Burley was formed in 1840 out of Ringwood.,
this was served by the Anglican church of John the Baptist which was built in
1839 and added to in 1886–7. A school was built in Burley in 1854 large enough
to accommodate 120 children.
The civil parish of Burley was formed in 1868 from Burley Walk and Holmsley
Walk, extra-parochial parts of the New Forest, together with the ancient vill of
Burley.[14] From 1847 to 1964, Burley was served by trains at nearby Holmsley
railway station, about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) southeast of the village. The station
buildings still stand, and are now tea rooms.
Burley has a long connection with witches and, during the late 1950s, Sybil
Leek, a self-styled white witch, lived in this village. The witch could be seen
walking around Burley with her pet jackdaw on her shoulder before she moved to
America. Some of the gift shops in Burley now sell witch-related gifts and
ornaments.
Burley was also once a favourite haunt for smugglers, and a secret cellar in the
Queens Head pub was discovered during renovation work, where pistols, coins, and
other unusual items were discovered.
Burley's dragon
Burley is notable in English folklore for being the supposed location of a
dragon's lair at Burley Beacon, just outside the village. There are several
local version of the tale. In one version, the creature "flew" every morning to
Bisterne, about 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Burley, where it would be supplied with
milk. In order to kill the dragon, a valiant man built himself a hut at Bisterne,
and with two dogs lay in wait. The creature came as usual one morning for its
milk, and when the hut door was opened the dogs attacked it, and while thus
engaged, the dragon was killed by the man. The dragon slayer himself, says
another version of the tale, only succeeded by covering his armour with glass.
The documentary version of this tradition is contained in the margin of a
pedigree roll written prior to 1618, and preserved at Berkeley Castle. It
actually names the dragon-slayer as Sir Maurice Berkeley, lord of the manor of
Bisterne in the 15th century. The document describes the dragon as "doing much
mischief upon men and cattle ... making his den near unto a Beacon." Sir Maurice
Berkeley killed the dragon but died himself soon afterwards.
It is possible the dragon had some foundation in fact, and that it was a wild
beast (such as a wild boar) living in and around the New Forest. The dragon is
mentioned several times in the novel The Forest by Edward Rutherfurd.
Accommodation in the New Forest
List of New Forest Accommodation in Burley
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1
B&B
Littlemead, Pound Lane, Burley BH24 4ED2
B&B
Churdles, Cott Lane, Burley BH24 4BB3
B&B
Wayside Cottage, Garden Road, Burley BH24 4EA4
B&B
Burley Inn, The Cross, Burley BH24 4AB5
B&B
Bay Tree House, 1 Clough Lane, Burley BH24 4AE6
B&B
Forest Tea House, Forest Cottage, Pound Lane, Burley BH24 4ED7
B&B
Holmans, Bisterne Close, Burley BH24 4AZ8
B&B
Springfield, Forest Road, Burley BH24 4DQ9
S/C Cottage
Great Wells House, Beechwood Lane, Burley BH24 4AS10
S/C Cottage
Littlemead Self Catering, Littlemead Self Catering, Burley BH24 4ED11
S/C Cottage
Durmast House Holiday Flat, Bisterne Close, Burley BH24 4AZ12
S/C Cottage
Brackenwood, Pound Lane, Burley BH24 4EB13
S/C Cottage
Grooms Cottage, Pound Lane, Burley BH24 4ED14
S/C Cottage
Stable Cottage, Burbush House, Pound Lane, Burley BH24 4ED15
Hotel
Moorhill House Hotel, Shappen Bottom, Burley BH24 4AG16
Hotel
Burley Manor Hotel, Ringwood Road, Burley17
Pubs and Inns
The White Buck Inn, Bisterne Close, Burley BH24 4AZ
More accommodation in the new forest
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