Prawle Point
The eastwards view from Prawle Point
Prawle Point is located in Devon
Prawle Point
Prawle Point
Shown within Devon
Coordinates: 50°12′6″N 3°43′19″W / 50.20167°N 3.72194°W / 50.20167; -3.72194

Prawle Point (Old English: Prǣwhyll, "lookout hill") is a coastal headland in south Devon, England. It is the southernmost point of Devon. Just to the west is Elender Cove, and further west are Gammons Head Beach, also known as Maceley Cove, and Gammon Head.[1][2][3]

Access is from the village of East Prawle along a single-track road, at the end of which a National Trust car park is present. At the point itself, there are high cliffs. The National Coastwatch Institution has a station at the point.[citation needed]

The area around the point is a noted area for cirl bunting, a localised bird in Britain, while the area has also attracted many rare vagrant birds including Britain's second chestnut-sided warbler.[citation needed]

The point is included within the Prawle Point and Start Point Site of Special Scientific Interest, which stretches from here to Start Point.[citation needed]

Shipwrecks

edit

Many ships have been wrecked at Prawle Point.[4]

Lalla Rookh, a tea clipper, was wrecked after striking Gammon head, afterwards being broken up and blown into Elender Cove, where she lies underneath the sand today.[3]

In December 1992 the ship Demetrios, formerly the Long Lin from China, was being towed by a tug from Dunkirk to a Mediterranean scrapyard. During terrible gales in the English Channel, the tow broke and the Demetrios drifted helplessly. The ship struck the rocks at Prawle Point on 18 December, breaking her back in a few hours. The wreck attracted huge crowds for many weeks, and eventually a local salvage company cut up the ship and towed away the remains to Plymouth. However, the cost of scrapping the ship sent them into liquidation. Some remains were, however left over and are still visible today.[4][5]

References

edit
  1. ^ Lewis, Simon. "Elender Cove Beach Information". Devon Beach Guide. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Gammons Head Beach, Devon, England". British Beaches. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b Clarkson, Steve (June 2016). "Start Point Project" (PDF). Retrieved 28 January 2021. This Start Point project documents the research carried out by the teamon the inshore shipwrecks on the South Devon coast. It covers the area between Start Point and Prawle Point
  4. ^ a b Larne, R and B. (2000). Shipwrecks of South Devon, page 20.ISBN 1-899383-35-2
  5. ^ "Wreck history: Demetrios". Submerged Productions: Shipwrecks around Devon and the world. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

East Prawle

coast south east of Salcombe, near the most southerly tip of Devon, Prawle Point. Mentioned in the Domesday Book, the village's name comes from the Anglo-Saxon

RNAS Prawle Point

The RNAS Naval Air Station Prawle Point was a British First World War airfield outside the village of East Prawle in Devon, England and 2.6 miles (4.2 km)

South West Coast Path

Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). The path passes through the Prawle Point and Start Point Site of Special Scientific Interest which is recognised as being

South Devon National Landscape

the longest stretches of coast belonging to the National Trust and Prawle Point, the southernmost point in Devon. South Devon AONB – Official Website

Slapton, Devon

known as Slapton Sands. After Lalla Rookh, a tea clipper, was wrecked at Prawle Point in March 1873, some of her cargo of tea and tobacco, heaped up to 11

Start Point, Devon

it nowadays transmits only a single broadcast, BBC Radio 5 Live. Prawle Point Prawle Point and Start Point Site of Special Scientific Interest v t e

Prawle Point and Start Point Site of Special Scientific Interest

The Prawle Point and Start Point Site of Special Scientific Interest (grid reference SX741371 to grid reference SX819381) is a 341.2 hectare biological

The King's Award for Voluntary Service

Coastwatch Institution (Mundesley 2009; Cornwall 2010; Dorset Region 2012; Prawle Point Devon 2012; Lincolnshire 2013; Needles 2018; Calshot Tower 2019) North