The Combingham Hall Hotel

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Welcome to Combingham Hall Hotel, where mystery and lethal intrigue stalks the endless corridors and cavernous halls of this enormous and luxurious mansion. Book a room and experience life in an authentic british mansion from the early 1900s.

Walk in the footsteps of renowned belgian detective Hercule Poirot as you make yourself at home at the site of the intriguing and dramatic series of events famously known as "the Mystery of Three Quarters".

During the 1930s, Combingham Hall was and had long been the private residence of wealthy mine-owner Barnabas Pandy, his two granddaughters Annabel Treadway and Lenore Lavington, Lenore's children Timothy and Ivy, as well as Mr. Pandy's manservant Kingsbury. In december of 1933, Barnabas Pandy drowned in his bath in the middle lakeside corridor bathroom. The next year, his granddaughter Annabel Treadway as well as four others: Sylvia Rule, John McCroddden and Hugo Dockerill, all received mysterious letters accusing them of Barnabas's murder, falsely signed in the name of famed belgian detective Hercule Poirot. After a long and confounding investigation, the details of which are available in Account of the Mystery of Three Quarters by Edward Catchpool, all the involved parties were summoned to an overnight stay at Combingham Hall, at the end of which they would learn the truth about Barnabas Pandys death and the mystery surrounding the letters. But they wouldn't learn the truth before the murderer had a chance to strike again...

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