ABOUT
£360 per room not inc breakfast.
breakfast £10 per person.
Shopping Weekends
thursday - monday
£49 per person, per night.
minimum 2 people, minimum 2 nights.
inclues free bottle of wine in room.
(offer excluding silverstone weekend)
Until 1982 known as 'The Swan with Two Necks', this is an ancient inn dating back to 1476 with a noble history that has been transformed by the Keswani family into a superbly furnished hotel where the refinements of the present blend happily with the aura of the past.
Today, the traditions of a town distinguished by its hospitality and beautifully preserved coaching hostelries are well maintained at this splendid 'inn of modern happiness'. Travellers in the staging era would marvel at the luxury of en-suite bathrooms, fitted carpets, central heating, and colour television with satellite channels in their rooms. Although guest rooms have been designed with the present-day visitor in mind, a sympathetic eye has been cast at the building's history. The elegant Georgian façade remains unchanged from 1743 when it replaced an earlier frontage following the great fire of Stony Stratford; the old stables still exist and fine antique furniture graces the rooms.
These days, all is light, warmth and comfort on the highest plane. A special reference to the magnificent, oak-panelled Al Tamborista Restaurant is reserved and fully deserved; here, diners may experience by candlelight Italian and Seafood cuisine at its very best and most inventive.
Also very deserving of a mention is the recently opened new wine bar and restaurant - The Vine. International top cuisine and quality wines combined with London style contemporary chic...an absolute must for those looking for something different in style and cuisine.
- First documentary evidence as a hostelry from 1470 as the Swan, and since alternatively the Three Swans or the Swan with Two Necks
- Richard III held the unfortunate Little Princes here before they were transported to the Tower of London to meet their final fate in 1483
- First mentioned as a possession of Bradwell Priory in 1526
- In business as 'The Swan with Two Necks' certainly by 1609
- The elegant Georgian stone façade remains unchanged from 1743, after the great fire of Stony Stratford
- 1982 changed its name to the 'Different Drummer'