
Freshwater
Contents
Kelly's Directory 1886 - Freshwater
"Freshwater is an extensive parish in the liberty and rural deanery of West
Medina, archdeaconry of the Isle of Wight and diocese of Winchester, 12 miles
west from Newport, 14 south-west from Cowes and 2 south from Yarmouth in the
extreme west of the island. The church of All Saints, a building of stone in
the Norman style, consists of chancel, nave, transepts, north and south aisles,
and square embattled tower containing 2 bells. The church was rebuilt and
partly restored in 1876, at a cost of £3,000, which was raised by public
subscriptions. The register dates from the year 1576. The living is a rectory,
yearly value £710, with residence and 6 acres of glebe, in the gift of
St. John's College, Cambridge, and held since 1839 by the Rev. John Frederick
Isaacson B.D. late fellow and tutor of that college and honorary canon of
Winchester. There are chapels for Wesleyans, Baptists and Bible Christians.
Holme's charity of £9 18s 10d yearly, derived from consols left in 18th
century, is for bread and partly given in Bibles and prayer books to the
children of the National school. Freshwater is much resorted to in summer as a
marine bathing place, on account of its pure atmosphere, its remarkable cliffs
and caverns, and its beautiful land and sea views: it stands on an estuary
formed by the mouth of the little river Yar, which, being at its source
separated only by a narrow isthmus of pebbles from the small creek called
Freshwater Gate, in the centre of Freshwater Bay, on the opposite coast, cuts
off this angle of the island, which in consequence, was formerly called the
Isle of Freshwater. There are two commodious hotels at Freshwater Bay, one at
Alum Bay, and one at Totland Bay. Several enchanting situations within Weston
manor and Norlands have been chosen as the sites of villas, among which are
Westhill, Norton Lodge, Afton House, the Marina, Farringford House and Alum Bay
Cottage. The cliffs, which bound the whole extent of Freshwater Bay, are of
stupendous height, and afford beautiful views from their summits: the prospect
from the Lighthouse, on the highest and extreme western point of the cliff, 600
feet perpendicular above the level of the sea, is exceedingly magnificent, and
includes a full view of the Needles: on the other side, within a short distance
west of the mouth of the Yar, where the estuary meets the sea, and nearly
opposite Hurst Castle, on the Hampshire coast, these cliffs commence; from that
point they skirt the length of Totland Bay and Alum Bay westward, gradually
increasing in height till, at the lighthouse, they meet the ridge from the
southern side; then stretching out into the sea, fell many years ago and
totally disappeared; the remaining three rocks are tipped by a number of jagged
points, resembling the grinders of an enormous jaw: the entire range of these
cliffs, when viewed from the sea, is beautiful: in some places they are
perpendicular, in others they project over the sea in an awe inspiring manner:
they are frequented, particularly from May to August, by great numbers of sea
birds, who deposit their eggs among the crevices of the shelving strata at a
great height: the country people take the birds thus harbouring by the perilous
expedient of descending by ropes fixed to iron bars driven into the ground, and
while thus suspended beat them down with sticks as they fly out of their holes.
Several caverns and deep chasms in these rocks seem to penetrate a
considerable way within in them; in many places the issuing springs form small
cascades of water rippling down to the sea. A very remarkable natural cave is
situated near Freshwater Gate: the principal entrance forms a rugged segment of
a circle, about 20 feet high and 35 wide; it runs into the rock about 120 feet:
this entrance can only be approached at low water, and even them the jutting
crags and lofty fragments of rock which obstruct the passage render the access
very difficult. At some distance to the eastward, about 500 yards from the
shore are two insulated rocks, through one of which the waves have formed an
opening, resembling a picturesque arch. Some very extensive Government Forts
have been erected here. Farringford House is the seat of Lord Tennyson
D.C.L., M.A. the poet laureate. Lord Haytesbury is lord of the manor of
Freshwater; Edwin Granville Ward esq. of the manor of Weston; Lord Tennyson of
the manors of Priors and Kings; Benjamin Cotton esq. of the manor of West
Afton. The principal landowners are the lords of the manors. The soil is sand
and gravel; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats &c. The
area is 4,835 acres of land and 479 foreshore and water; rateable value,
£13,994; the population in 1881 was 2,809, including 331 in the
fortifications." (From Kelly's Directory of the Isle of Wight, 1886)
[Last updated: 4th August 2003 - Brian Pears]