May 23rd 2003

Set into a steep hillside, Clovelly is one of the most famous villages in the world. The single cobbled high street winds its way down the hillside through traditional whitewashed cottages festooned with fuchsias and geraniums. The high street drops 122m (400ft) in 0.8km (half a mile) through the 16th century cottages to a small harbour. Traffic is banned from the high street, visitors parking at the top of the hill adjacent to the Heritage Centre. For a small fee, a land rover service ferries visitors up and down the steep hill via a back road, to the harbour side Red Lion Public House. The Lower part of the village was saved from development by the Hamlyn family. The policy of the Clovelly estate has maintained - against all the odds - this picture postcard village as a living village. There are no Holiday cottages allowed in the main village, and the mode of transport is either sledges for the Friday deliveries, or donkeys for the visiting tourists. The sledges can be seen at the side of the cottages as you walk down through the village to the Harbour. Clovelly has been a place of settlement for many years, but it was a 16th century lawyer, George Cary, who really established the village as a viable community. George Cary, built the stone harbour quay - establishing Clovelly a the only safe harbour between Boscastle in Cornwall and Appledore.


Clovelly is situated at Number 4 on this North Devon Tourist Map
All the photographs on this page are my property. Should you require any please do me the courtesy of asking - thank you.

 


Mount Pleasant Memorial and Picnic Area

Mount Pleasant

Ready to begin the descent

Descending towards the village

The main street down towards the harbour

A pair of donkeys rest at the top of the street

Residential Cottage

The rear of the New Inn

Narrow cobbled lane leads past the Fisherman's Cottage

The tiny chapel of St Peter

Entrance, Fisherman's Cottage

Small Residence

Inside fisherman's cottage a

view of the kitchen

Entrance view

Nearby Museum

Charles Kingsley, a model of the author at work

Residence off the main street

Base of main street

Harbour

Rooftops by Harbour

The Bay

Looking back up the main street

Seagull eyes up the waste bin

And decides to look for lunch

Harbour

Red Lion & Harbour Wall

 This ancient fishing village is mentioned in the Doomsday book (c.1100 A.D.) and it is probable that a settlement existed before that, in Saxon times.


Residence

Workshop & lobster pots

Red Lion

 The small harbour was sheltered up to 60 fishing boats, but due to the decline of the herring fishery this has now dwindled to a handful of small boats.


Harbour Dwellings

Looking back up to Clovelly

Lifeboat Station

Harbour Wall

Red Lion from Sea Wall

Red Lion and Sea Wall

Cliff face

Cliff Face

Looking Westwards

With two

gulls

Rear of lifeboat Station
 
       

Clovelly's famous

Waterfall

Coastline

Clovelly Harbour

Close up of Waterfall

Surf hits the rocky shoreline

Looking Eastwards

Back on the Cliffs

Visitors Centre Pottery Workshops Display

And the potter, Caroline

Donkeys rest in the

afternoon sun

http://www.clovelly.co.uk/index2.htm