June 21, 2024 to June 23, 2024
Flower Show
The highly anticipated three-day gardening show returns from Friday 21st to Sunday 23rd June 2024, celebrating the best of British gardening. This year's event is bigger than ever, featuring an array of stands and entertainment. Highlights include the return of the magnificent Grand Floral Pavilion and the stunning outdoor floral displays of ‘Floral Street’. Engage with gardening experts through a series of talks and demonstrations, and enjoy fabulous food and drink, homeware, crafts, and live music all weekend. Don't miss this vibrant showcase of gardening excellence, perfect for enthusiasts looking to explore the latest in gardening trends and innovations.
BOOK A VISIT
- Palace, Formal Gardens & Park Book now
Event open to holders of Palace, Formal Gardens & Park, tickets between June 21, 2024 and June 23, 2024
Please wear suitable footwear, sunscreen and insect repellent.

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MORE ABOUT THIS LOCATION




BLENHEIM PALACE
Blenheim Palace
The gift of a sovereign to the triumphant John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, Blenheim is a symbol of national achievement and royal satisfaction. The greatest of English palaces (George III understandably remarked that he had 'nothing to equal this'), its Baroque grandeur and state recall palaces abroad, such as the Belvedere in Vienna built a few years later by Prince Eugene, Marlborough's companion in arms, rather than anything in the UK.
Blenheim might well have been merely an extravagant pile; that it proved an architecturalmasterpiece was due to the imagination of Sir John Vanbrugh, who had recently at Castle Howard completed his first house, before finising Blenheim in 1722. Its build journey was not an easy one, with Vanbrugh and Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough in constant clashes, and in the end they parted ways. From 1764, the landscape architect Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown transformed the park at Blenheim into a naturalistic haven, building a tree-fringed lake at its centre, around which today wonderful walks can be had with views of the palace.
By the late 19th century, the Marlboroughs’ finances were looking bleak, and a series of paintings, as well as Blenheim’s library were sold to ease the situation. Salvation came in 1895 when the super-rich American heiress Consuelo Vanderbilt was encouraged by her ambitious mother to marry Charles ‘Sunny’ Spencer-Churchill, 9th Duke of Marlborough, and save Blenheim from ruin. While this was successful, the venture came at a different kind of cost: the Marlboroughs’ marriage failed, and ended in 1921. The house was used as a school and then to house MI5 during the Second World War, during which the family stayed on-site, and in 1987, Blenheim was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
In 1712 when going aborad, Marlborough left instructions 'that all persons may see ye whole Building to their Satisfaction' - words that still ring true today. Whilst the Palace remains the family home of the Dukes of Marlborough, Blenheim welcomes visitors annually from January - November.
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