sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Capture that Downton feeling in England and North America

NEW YORK What鈥檚 a Downton Abbey fan to do now that the series is over? Consider a trip to soothe your sorrows. There are castles and dozens of film locations in Britain, and Gilded Age mansions in the U.S.
d1-0312-downton1.jpg
In the United States, mansions from the Gilded Age such as The Breakers in Newport, Rhode Island, may be of interest to Downton Abbey fans looking for destinations reminiscent of the showÕs milieu.

NEW YORK

What鈥檚 a Downton Abbey fan to do now that the series is over? Consider a trip to soothe your sorrows. There are castles and dozens of film locations in Britain, and Gilded Age mansions in the U.S. There are maps and apps, and even a costume exhibit touring museums around the U.S. Here are some details.

Highclere Castle

Highclere Castle, where most of Downton was filmed, is about 72听kilometres from London and open to the public 60 to 70 days a year in spring and summer. Advance tickets to tour the mansion are nearly sold out for 2016, though some walk-up tickets are available. Details at highclerecastle.co.uk/ public-opening-times-and-prices.

A number of private tour operators, such as Collette, offer trips that guarantee access to Highclere.

For a tour without going anywhere, try the $2.99 Highclere app.

Elsewhere in England

A free online map detailing 71 Downton locations, nearly half in London, was put together by the United Kingdom branch of Wayfair, the home goods retailer: wayfair.co.uk/aresidence/ 2015/12/04/downton-abbey- filming.

Sites include West Wycombe Park, featured as Lady Rosamund鈥檚 London home at 35听Belgrave Square; the London Charterhouse, used in three scenes; and the Great Conservatory at Syon Park in Brentford, where Lady Mary and Lord Gillingham had tea.

Fangirl Samantha Scott, who works at Stride Travel, a review site for tours and trips, put together a guide to 10 Downton locations, including Bampton church, featured in the wedding of Carson and Mrs. Hughes, and Horsted Keynes Railway Station, where many scenes were shot, including Lady Mary鈥檚 farewell to her husband as he went off to war: (stridetravel.com/blogs/10-stunning-downton-abbey- location).

Britmovietours.com offers a variety of Downton-themed tours, including one focusing on locations in London.

And let鈥檚 not forget Inveraray Castle in Scotland, the setting for the fictional Duneagle Castle, home to the Grantham cousins and the lovely, headstrong Lady Rose.

The castle is a bit more discreet than other sites in advertising its connection to the series, but its website offers some details: inveraray-castle.com/Downton-Abbey.html .

Other destinations with no connection to the show are also offering themselves to Downton fans in mourning.

In Scotland, Dundas Castle鈥檚 鈥淒ownton Experience鈥 starts at $3,500 a day.

Here鈥檚 the pitch: 鈥淲hether you want to live like a lord, cook like Mrs. Patmore or just learn how things were done in times gone by, the Downton Experience gives castle guests firsthand experience of life in a grand house.鈥

In the U.S.

Consider a trip to Newport, Rhode Island, to see the Breakers, the Elms and other Gilded Age mansions. These massive, ornate homes, filled with art and antiques and set on lavishly landscaped grounds, were built and owned by nouveau riche Americans at the turn of the 20th century. Their new money was despised by British aristocracy, but the backstory of Lord Grantham showed how those U.S. dollars were often used to prop up the crumbling world of England鈥檚 landed gentry: He took his bride, Cora, from one of those rich American families because he needed her fortune to secure his estate.

> See COSTUME, page D2

Cora鈥檚 American mother, played by the inimitable Shirley MacLaine in a few early episodes, lived in Rhode Island.

Other famous Gilded Age mansions include the Biltmore in Asheville, North Carolina, and The Mount, in western Massachusetts.

Downton writer Julian Fellowes is also writing a new series based on these mansions called, no surprisingly, The Guilded Age.

Downton fashion exhibit

Do you love drop-waist dresses, elbow-length gloves and festive hats? Get your costume fix at an exhibition called 鈥淒ressing Downton,鈥 now at the Richard H. Driehaus Museum in Chicago.

The exhibition, subtitled, 鈥淐hanging Fashion for Changing Times,鈥 is billed as a 鈥渃ostume chronicle鈥 with period clothing and jewelry worn by servants as well as lords and ladies.

Over the next two years, the exhibition will move to Cincinnati鈥檚 Taft Museum of Art; The History Museum in South Bend, Indiana; Anaheim, California鈥檚 Muzeo Museum and Cultural Center; Nashville, Tennessee鈥檚 Cheekwood Botanical Gardens & Museum of Art; and finally St. Augustine, Florida鈥檚 Lightner Museum. Details at http://dressingdownton.com/tour/ .

Cocktails and cruises

You could drown your sorrows with a few stiff cocktails during a night on the town, as Lady Mary did with her beaus in London. If you prefer sipping Earl Grey or Darjeeling tea from a floral-patterned china teacup with a platter of scones and finger sandwiches, head to a hotel or tea shop.

If all else fails, take your cue from Violet, the Dowager Countess. After learning she鈥檇 been removed from the board of the local hospital, she escaped her troubles with a cruise to France.

鈥淎s the Dowager Countess has taught us, there is nothing like a quick European getaway to regain one鈥檚 composure,鈥 said Julie McCool, promoting Viking Ocean Cruises, whose ads have become a familiar part of watching Downton. 鈥滳ruisers live in comfortable luxury, are cheerfully waited on day and night by a staff who lives on the lower decks, of course, and encounter beautiful examples of the imperial past as they travel. Why, it鈥檚 almost like being back at the Abbey!鈥