William Morris and Broadway Tower

Recommended by
Our view
"A haunt of the Arts and Crafts pioneer towers above this Worcestershire village"
Walk directions
From the car park, walk back down Church Close then turn left. At the far end of the church wall turn left down a track, soon passing a tiny orchard. Continue straight ahead and through a gate by some horse jumps. Turn right along a grassy strip, through a gate and across a small bridge over a rivulet. Turn slightly left across uneven pasture. Go through a kissing gate and up to the far right-hand field corner and through a metal kissing gate. Go right, through a green kissing gate, and over a sleeper bridge beside a stone barn.
Go slightly left up a grassy field, passing a waymarker in a boggy patch to reach a stile. Continue over this and up a grassy field (horse jumps on right). Cross another stile, cutting slightly right across a small field corner to a large gap in the hedgerow. Continue along this line through a further long grassy field. Pass a prominent large sycamore tree and go through gates either side of Millennium Woodland. Maintain the line across a large field and down to go through a metal gate by a corner of woodland. Ignore a track leading immediately right, and go out of the woodland via a step-over gate.
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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Pasture, rough, tree-root path, pavements, some stiles
  Landscape  - Flat vale rising to escarpment
  Dog friendliness  - Sheep- and horse-grazing country (some cattle too, and possibility of red deer by Broadway Tower) so only off lead in empty fields; some stiles may be tricky
  Parking  - Church Close pay-and-display car park, just off Church Street, 4 hours maximum; other options are well signposted
  Toilets en route  - Church Close car park and Fish Hill Picnic Place
About the walk
If Caspar Wistar, the 18th-century American anatomist after whom the wisteria genus was named, were alive today, a springtime visit to Broadway would give him much pleasure. Visitors come in swarms to this Worcestershire village, which lies against the edge of the Cotswolds – understandably so, for...
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About the area
Worcestershire is a county of rolling hills, save for the flat Vale of Evesham in the east and the prominent spine of the Malverns in the west. Nearly all of the land is worked in some way; arable farming predominates – oilseed rape, cereals and potatoes – but there are concentrated areas of specific land uses, such as market gardening and plum growing.
Area image

William Morris and Broadway Tower

Recommended by
Our view
"A haunt of the Arts and Crafts pioneer towers above this Worcestershire village"
Dog friendly
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Pasture, rough, tree-root path, pavements, some stiles
  Landscape - Flat vale rising to escarpment
  Dog friendliness - Sheep- and horse-grazing country (some cattle too, and possibility of red deer by Broadway Tower) so only off lead in empty fields; some stiles may be tricky
  Parking - Church Close pay-and-display car park, just off Church Street, 4 hours maximum; other options are well signposted
  Toilets en route - Church Close car park and Fish Hill Picnic Place
About the walk
If Caspar Wistar, the 18th-century American anatomist after whom the wisteria genus was named, were alive today, a springtime visit to Broadway would give him much pleasure. Visitors come in swarms to this Worcestershire village, which lies against the edge of the Cotswolds – understandably so, for...
Read more
Been on this walk placeholder

Been on this walk?

Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.

Walking in Safety placeholder

Walking in Safety

Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.

Get an AA guide placeholder

Get an AA guide

Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.

About the area
Area image
Worcestershire
Worcestershire is a county of rolling hills, save for the flat Vale of Evesham in the east and the prominent spine of the Malverns in the west. Nearly all of the land is worked in some way; arable farming predominates – oilseed rape, cereals and potatoes – but there are concentrated areas of specific land uses, such as market gardening and plum growing.