| Lulworth
Cove or named Lulstead Cove in Thomas Hardy's 'Far From
The Madding Crowd', is one of the most famous beauty
spots on the South Coast of England, shaped like an almost perfect
horse shoe it is sandwiched between two gems of land formation
and unique geological structures. The rock-arch of Durdle
Door to the west of the cove and the Fossil Forest
to the east, sitting up on a ledge above the English Channel.
The surrounding countryside & coastline is some of the most
beautiful and unspoilt in Southern England, which has now been
recognised as being totally unique having gained World Heritage
status in the last two years. Lulworth has a permanent exhibition
in the Heritage Centre showing the history and geological importance
of the East Devon & Dorset World Heritage 'Jurassic'
Coastline along with a standing stone unveiled by Prince
Charles in 2002.
In the past Lulworth has not just been home to dinosaurs
in a carboniferous forest and ammonites in the surrounding warm
sea 65 million years ago, it has had many other famous and infamous
residents and visitors in more recent years.
Iron age man started by felling trees, forming field systems and
building a hill fort on Bindon Hill behind the cove along with
burying their king on the top of Hambury Tout beside the path
to Durdle Door. The Romans came and used the
safe anchorage of the cove for their ships and merchant vessels
to supply the garrison and town of Dorchester – some people
say that they can still hear the rattle of the amour of Roman
legions marching over the hills behind Lulworth!
A community of Trappist monks escaping from France
set up home and built a little chapel in 1300's on the east of
the cove at Little Bindon before later moving inland to Bindon
Abbey – other French exiles stayed in Lulworth including
King Charles X and legend has it that Napoleon
landed here to reconnoitre the practicalities of invasion but
while standing on a rock in the cove sighed before turning his
attentions on Russia! Sir Francis Drake engaged
the Great Spanish Armada along the coast nearby driving a Spanish
man-o-war on to the rocks west of St Oswald which is still called
Man-o-War bay.
Lulworth Castle was built in the early 17th century
by Thomas Howard, 3rd Viscount Bindon. He was
a member of the huge Howard clan who were in great favour at the
court of James I. Designed grand hunting James
the first was a regular visitor. During the Civil War, Corfe
Castle and Bindon Abbey were destroyed
and Lulworth Castle was badly damaged, in 1643 the estate was
purchased by Humphrey Weld, a wealthy Londoner and the family
still own the estate. The Castle was seriously damaged by a fire
in 1929 and remained a shell until recently. The parkland around
Lulworth Castle has seen royal romps & romances, notably that
of the Roman Catholic Maria Anne Smythe who married
King George IV in a liaison outlawed by Parliament.
The
Catholic church of St Mary in the park was built by Thomas
Weld in 1786 - 87 to designs of John Tasker.
and the family tradition holds that they were only allowed to
build a church if it did not resemble one. Accordingly the family
built a neo-classical building that looks like a large garden
temple. The interior has a central dome and the four apses leading
off this have half-domes. Most of the original fittings remain
including the marble altar obtained from Rome.
The Cove was and maybe still is a firm favourite with smugglers
being extremely sheltered, it could therefore be used in virtually
all weathers, and was of course the ideal spot to sink tubs. One,
a hogshead of French red, bobbed up in 1717, and was promptly
seized, though it proved to be 'poor thin stuff that will not
keep'.
A couple of years later nearly a dozen smugglers were stopped
near the cove as they tried to run wine and brandy in the early
hours of a summer's morning. They fought like demons with flails,
swords and clubs, and when it looked like they'd lose the cargo,
the smugglers staved in some of the barrels, and made off with
the remainder. The battle between smugglers and revenue men went
on for some twelve hours, and attracted people from four parishes,
who ran off with the abandoned barrels.
In the early years of the 18th century the local venturer at Lulworth
was one Charles Weeks, who lived at Winfrith,
and who had developed a particularly shrewd way of defrauding
the revenue. He would buy seized goods at legitimate auctions,
and mix in the smuggled article for onward shipment, often to
London. When an officer challenged Weeks to produce receipts showing
that duty had been paid, Weeks could often do so. When he couldn't,
he would threaten the officer with litigation; on the pittance
paid by the government, no customs officer could afford a legal
action, so the smuggler escaped.
Smugglers are said to have stored contraband in a cave at the
most easterly point of Mupe Bay. In 1906 it can be reached following
the coast from Lulworth, and by descending the cliff the moment
the bay is reached. The cave is at the foot of the precipice,
at a spot where a little channel has been cleared between the
boulders for a boat to land.
The Lulworth men evidently took no chances of being identified
by the local customs authorities: on a tombstone in Weymouth's
Bury Street cemetery there is the following inscription:
Sacred to the memory of Lieut. Thos Edward Knight, RN, of
Folkestone, Kent, Aged 42, who in the execution of his duty as
Chief Officer of the Coastguard was wantonly attacked by a body
of smugglers near Lulworth on the night of 28th of June 1832,
by whom after being unmercifully beaten he was thrown over the
cliff near Durdle Door from the effects of which he died the following
day.
Writers to have been drawn by Lulworth's charms include John
Keats who wrote the poem 'Bright Star, Would I Were
Stedfast' while visiting in 1819. Rupert Brooke
and Bertrand Russell, have also visited Lulworth
for inspiration and the Georgian playwright John O'Keeffe
found his model for John Barleycorn in the Red
Lion, now no longer a pub but a private house called Churchfields,
in West Lulworth.
Thomas Hardy had Troy swim in
Lulworth Cove, Lulstead or Lulwind Cove in 'Far From The
Maddin Crowd' – "Troy came to a small
basin of sea enclosed by the cliffs. He undressed and plunged
in. Inside the cove the water was uninteresting to a swimmer,
being smooth as a pond, and to get a little of the ocean swell,
Troy presently swam between the two projecting spurs of rock which
formed the pillars of Hercules to this miniature Mediterranean."
Later on Hardy wrote a 1920 Poem commemorating Keats's visit to
Lulworth Cove called…
'At Lulworth Cove a Century Back'.
Had I but lived a hundred years ago
I might have gone, as I have gone this year,
By Warmwell Cross on to a Cove I know,
And Time have placed his finger on me there:
'You see that man?' -- I might have looked, and said,
'O yes: I see him. One that boat has brought
Which dropped down Channel round Saint Alban's Head.
So commonplace a youth calls not my thought.'
'You see that man?' -- 'Why yes; I told you; yes:
Of an idling town-sort; thin; hair brown in hue;
And as the evening light scants less and less
He looks up at a star, as many do.'
'You see that man?' -- 'Nay, leave me!' then I plead,
'I have fifteen miles to vamp across the lea,
And it grows dark, and I am weary-kneed:
I have said the third time; yes, that man I see!'
'Good. That man goes to Rome -- to death, despair;
And no one notes him now but you and I:
A hundred years, and the world will follow him there,
And bend with reverence where his ashes lie.'
Paddle-steamers with specially strengthened bows brought the wider
public right in onto the beach at the Cove in Victorian times.
T.E.Lawrence who used the pseudonym Shaw to avoid
publicity after his return from North Africa, where he was better
known as 'Lawrence of Arabia'. bought the cottage
not far from Lulworth at Clouds Hill and it became
his 'earthly paradise' where he found the peace and quiet he needed
to work on 'Seven Pillars of Wisdom' which was published
in 1926. Then in 1935, after spending many years in the Air Force
away from the cottage, Lawrence was discharged at the age of 46
and returned to Clouds Hill to live out his days. Five days later
he was killed in a crash on his motor cycle when returning to
Clouds Hill from Bovington Camp nearby and was buried in the local
churchyard.
The tiny rooms of Clouds Hill are as Lawrence left them with simple
and austere furnishings, some of which he made himself. The cottage
reflects his complex personality and monastic way of life. The
crowded book room is lined with shelves from floor to ceiling.
Under the roof is the music room, which contains Lawrences's wind-up
gramophone with its huge horn curling over a leather sofa. His
78rpm. records are still there, as are photographs relating to
his Arabian campaign.
The domineering house called Weston now hidden
in the trees near the cove, designed for a friend by the famous
architect Sir Edward Lutyens became home for
the stars when Sir Lawrence Olivier and Vivienne
Leigh spent the first night of their honeymoon there
although they were apparently somewhat upset by being woken early
in the morning by the lady of the house!
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