St Helens, Isle of Wight

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St. Helens is a small village located on the eastern side of the Isle of Wight.

St Helens Old Church
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St Helens Old Church

The village is based around village greens.

Lying on the high ground to the north of Bembridge, St Helens has good views over the busy harbour. It is a small village with fine village green on which cricket is played during the summer and football in the winter.

A short walk from the village to the sea leads to the St Helens Duver at the mouth of the harbour, a sand-dune complex which was the first golf course on the Isle of Wight, and where there is now a popular sheltered beach, cafe, and beach huts. The Duver is no longer a golf course and is maintained by the National Trust, who also offer limited self-catering accommodation for holiday-makers in the area.

The origins of St. Helens seems to revolve around the Cluniac Priory and the monastic church, built circa 1080. In 1340 a French raid landed at St Helens but was repulsed. In 1346 Edward III set sail from St Helens to invade Normandy.

After the alien priories were suppressed by Henry V in 1414 the old church became the parish church. The original church eventually became unsafe, and a new church was built further inland. In 1720 a great wave destroyed the old church. The tower still stands to this day, the seaward side is painted as a seamark. It is believed that Admiral Lord Nelson's last view of England was of the St Helen's seamark - HMS Victory had anchored nearby to collect drinking water.

Dressed stones from the walls of the destroyed church, which were soft sandstone, were found to be good for scrubbing the decks of wooden planked warships - hence the terms 'holystones' and 'holystoning the decks'.

The closest Royal Commission sea fort to the Island is named after St. Helens St Helens Fort