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Information for visitors
Prime spot right on the beachfront for this office. See
Image] for the clock and
Image] for a detail.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 3 Sep 2013
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Memorial clock
The seagull probably doesn't realise the significance but this clock on the tourist centre was provided by local donations in memory of the fallen of WWII. See
Image] for a wider view.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 3 Sep 2013
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Library Cottage, Lyme Regis
A real surprise at the beach, a thatched cottage with colour-washed hexagonal slate-hung walls; Grade-II listed: http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-404642-library-cottage-lyme-regis-dorset#.V7IWRSZTGmQ . The 'Marine Circulating Library' was established here in 1839. the gigantic lead rainwater heads are apparently imported from elsewhere.
Image: © Bill Harrison
Taken: 5 Jul 2016
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Lamppost on marine parade
Image: © Philip Jeffrey
Taken: 28 Sep 2009
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Lyme Regis (1985)
The beach in front of the Bay Hotel. The groynes appear to have been removed since this photo was taken in 1985
Image: © Graham Hogg
Taken: Unknown
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Lyme Regis : Marine Parade
Marine Parade along the coastline of Lyme Regis and the Jurassic Coastline.
Image: © Lewis Clarke
Taken: 1 Aug 2011
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Wishing Wall
The local branch have a donations box embedded in the seafront wall.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 3 Sep 2013
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Lyme Regis National Trust Shop
Located right on the seafront on the Cobb.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 3 Sep 2013
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The 'Story Boat', Marine Parade, Lyme Regis
The 'Story Boat' was constructed by Lyme Regis boat builder Gail McGarva. Gail, who has previously built three pilot gigs for Lyme Regis Gig Club, has named her latest Arts Council-supported project the Story Boat. It follows on from a scholarship she won a few years back to build a fishing boat, called a Lerret, which had since the 17th century been wholly native to Lyme Bay.
Researching the Lerret, Gail began collecting stories from fishing families about their past and their relationship to the sea, and she also became the guardian of ‘Vera’, one of two remaining seaworthy Lerrets, which was built in 1923 and fished from Langton Herring.
In 2011, Gail received Heritage Lottery Fund support to travel around the Dorset coast with her own Lerret, ‘Littlesea’, modelled on ‘Vera’, so that local people could learn about and enjoy the stories of this unique vessel and the Dorset fishing communities.
Six years later, Gail has worked with local wheelwrights Rowland & Son, based in Colyton, to give a new lease of life to ‘Vera’ by transforming her into the Story Boat, an enchanting space for oral history recording and exhibitions.
The Story Boat is supported by the Arts Council, West Dorset District Council, The Trusthouse Charitable Foundation, G.F Eyre Trust and local sponsors.
As an aside, Langton Herring derives its name from the 13th century landowners called Harang, not from the more well known fish.
Image: © John Stephen
Taken: 15 Mar 2018
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The 'Story Boat', Marine Parade, Lyme Regis
The 'Story Boat' was constructed by Lyme Regis boat builder Gail McGarva. Gail, who has previously built three pilot gigs for Lyme Regis Gig Club, has named her latest Arts Council-supported project the Story Boat. It follows on from a scholarship she won a few years back to build a fishing boat, called a Lerret, which had since the 17th century been wholly native to Lyme Bay.
Researching the Lerret, Gail began collecting stories from fishing families about their past and their relationship to the sea, and she also became the guardian of ‘Vera’, one of two remaining seaworthy Lerrets, which was built in 1923 and fished from Langton Herring.
In 2011, Gail received Heritage Lottery Fund support to travel around the Dorset coast with her own Lerret, ‘Littlesea’, modelled on ‘Vera’, so that local people could learn about and enjoy the stories of this unique vessel and the Dorset fishing communities.
Six years later, Gail has worked with local wheelwrights Rowland & Son, based in Colyton, to give a new lease of life to ‘Vera’ by transforming her into the Story Boat, an enchanting space for oral history recording and exhibitions.
The Story Boat is supported by the Arts Council, West Dorset District Council, The Trusthouse Charitable Foundation, G.F Eyre Trust and local sponsors.
As an aside, Langton Herring derives its name from the 13th century landowners called Harang, not from the more well known fish.
Image: © John Stephen
Taken: 15 Mar 2018
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