19th Century Locations
For Filming and Photoshoots
The 19th century (1800s) in rural England focuses on practical architecture, with farmhouses, barns, and complete farmyards shaping the countryside. Our locations from this period showcase a variety of traditional buildings, from houses and outbuildings to barns and yards, reflecting the functional, lived-in character of 19th-century rural life while offering a range of authentic interiors and exteriors for filming and photoshoots.
23 locations are in the portfolio relevant to “19th century”
9 are exclusive to us
19th-Century Farmyards
Crown Farm is a historic 19th-century farmstead featuring a traditional Oast House, vacant barns, and outbuildings, offering accessible and versatile shooting spaces. Set within 700 acres of farmland, including cereals, grass fields, and woodland, the old buildings retain a sense of history and varied agricultural use across the centuries.
Dash Farm, on the other hand, is a late 19th-century model farm, with dressed stone doorways, windows, and period detailing, including a Victorian farmhouse built in 1898. The site includes 18th- and 19th-century farmyards, stables, barns, a partially walled garden, and working farm buildings spread across nearly 200 acres of arable fields, paddocks, and woodland.
Both farms are ready for full takeovers, making them ideal for film, TV, or photography productions, with lots of options in one compact, self-contained location.
19th-century farmhouses
Our 19th-century farmhouse collection spans a range of styles and settings, from the empty Grade II-listed farmhouse built in 1824 at Featheridge Farm to the charming pink farmhouse set within the equestrian centre at Magnolia Farm. These properties retain period character and rustic charm, often surrounded by yards, outbuildings, and farmland, providing versatile and authentic backdrops for both interiors and exteriors.
Spotlight: Flaxen Farm
Flaxen Farm is a classic Cotswold farm combining timeless stone architecture with authentic agricultural settings. The Grade II-listed stone barn, dating to 1804, features oak beams, cobbled flooring, a loft, and an original corn-crushing machine, preserving a piece of rural heritage.
The main farmhouse offers both interiors and exteriors, with beamed lounges and dining rooms, stone fireplaces, a limestone kitchen, and a wisteria-clad frontage.
The courtyard, framed by the farmhouse, provides a photogenic, self-contained setting, while surrounding traditional outbuildings, stables, grassland, orchard, and small woodland complete the versatile farm backdrop ready for film and photoshoots.
