Bovey Castle, formerly the Manor House Hotel, is a large early 20th-century mansion on the edge of Dartmoor National Park, near Moretonhampstead, Devon, England. It is a Grade II* listed building and is now a hotel with 59 individually designed bedrooms in the hotel and 22 three-storey country lodges nearby.
The building is built of granite quarried within the wider estate, with dressings of stone from Darley Dale in Derbyshire. Over 300 people worked on the construction of the building, and the completion was celebrated with a grand dinner for them in March 1908.
The hotel opened in 1929 as the "Manor House Hotel". The following year, on Whitsun 1930, the new 18-hole golf course opened at the hotel, designed by John Frederick Abercromby. The following year, a group of noted golf professionals played at the Manor House Hotel course, at the invitation of Viscount Churchill, chairman of the Great Western Railway.
The nationalisation of the railways in 1948 led to the hotel being part of the British Transport Commission's Hotels Executive, which eventually became the British Transport Hotels portfolio.
Eclipsecare maintained ownership of the hotel under its Crown Hotels group until 1991 when the group went into receivership. The hotel continued to trade, and do good business, whilst the parent company was in administration.
de Savary undertook extensive renovation and extension of the property, rebranding the hotel as Bovey Castle. The expansion included the building of a new wing on the main building, containing a swimming pool and new brasserie restaurant, as well as the building of 22 lodges in the grounds.
In 2006 de Savary sold Bovey Castle to Hilwood Resorts for over £26m. Hilwood put the hotel up for sale for £17.5m in 2012, and was eventually sold in 2015 to the Rigby Group, forming part of their Eden Hotel Collection.
The castle was used as the venue for the wedding of diver Tom Daley and his husband, Dustin Lance Black, in May 2017.
The hotel was named as Large Hotel of the Year at the South West Tourism Awards in 2024, following a win at the Devon Tourism Awards.
Wartime service
Conversion to a hotel
Privatisation
Expansion and name change
Recognition
Architecture
Incidents
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