Mount Edgcumbe Country Park

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Mount Edgcumbe Country Park is one of four designated Country Parks in Cornwall. It is 885 acres situated on the Rame Peninsula, overlooking Plymouth Sound and the River Tamar. The Park has been famous since the 18th Century, when the Edgcumbe family created formal gardens, temples, follies and woodlands around the Tudor House. Specimen trees such as Californian Redwood, stand against copses which shelter a herd of wild fallow deer. The South West Coast Path runs through the Park for nine miles along the coastline.

The Park also contains the villages of Kingsand, Cawsand, as well as the House itself.
The Formal Gardens are grouped in the lower park near Cremyll. Originally a 17th Century 'wilderness' garden, the present scheme was laid out by the Mount Edgcumbe family in the 18th Century. The Formal Gardens include an Orangery, an Italian Garden, a French Garden, an English Garden and a Jubilee Garden, which opened in 2002, to celebrate the Queen's Golden Jubilee.
The Park and Formal Gardens are open all year round and admission is free. The Park and Gardens are jointly managed by Cornwall County Council and Plymouth City Council.

Although the park covers a large area, the park has limited formal maintenance. This gives it a rough and ready rural feel in all except the formal gardens. Easily worth a long walk, picnic or children's party.
see also:Mount Edgcumbe House and Earl of Mount Edgcumbe

[edit] Features of the Park

  • Barn Pool

A sheltered deep water basin anchorage used by the Vikings in 997. Offshore there is a shipwreck of the Catharina von Flensburg. In 1831, HMS Beagle set off from here on her second voyage with Charles Darwin on board.

  • Barrow

c.1200 BC - a Bronze Age burial mound, re-used as a "Prospect Mound" in the 18th century.

  • Blockhouse

c.1545 - a small fort built on the shoreline in King Henry VIII's reign, to defend the mouth of the Tamar and the Edgcumbe's town of West Stonehouse opposite.

Originally a Lloyds Signal Station, where signalling was done from passing ships to the station by flags during the day and by lights at night, it became a radio station in 1905, then transferred to the Coastguards c.1925.

c.1204 - a major ferry crossing between Devon and Cornwall since Medieval times.

  • Deer

In 1515 Sir Piers Edgcumbe was given permission by King Henry VIII to em park deer. The deer roam freely on the Rame Peninsula.

  • Deer Wall

c.1695 - A stone wall with outer ditch to protect the Amphitheatre from deer.

  • Earl's Drive

In early days called the Terrace. A driveway from the House round the coast to Maker Church by 1788, extended to Penlee Point by 1823.

1747 - an artificial ruin which replaced a navigation obelisk. It was built from stone from the churches of St. George and St. Lawrence, Stonehouse.

  • Formal Gardens

From circa 1750 to 1820 - gardens in Italian, English and French styles. New Zealand, American (1989) and Jubilee Gardens (2003) have now been added.

  • Garden Battery

c.1747 and 1863 - an 18th century saluting platform, originally mounted with 21 guns to greet visitors. Re-built in 1863 as part of Plymouth's Naval defences.

  • Harbour View Seat

18th century - a much damaged ornamental seat also known as White Seat, with a magnificent view north up the River Tamar.

  • Higher Deer House

19th century - in the Grotton Plantation the ruins of a two storey fodder store for deer; and the ruined 18th century Pebble Seat facing south.

From around 1800, this ice house is situated under the bridge leading to the House. It is only open on special occasions.

First mentioned in 1186, it was enlarged in the 15th century. This is the family church of the Edgcumbes.

  • Milton's Temple

A circular temple from 1755, with a plaque inscribed with lines from Paradise Lost; overhead up grew, insuperable heights of loftiest shade......

Situated in the Italian Garden the Orangery is thought to have been built as early as 1760. The building is now a fully licensed restaurant.

1892 - the remains of a Victorian fort armed with 3 guns in both World Wars. A granite sculpture by Greg Powlesland, (1995), is in the nearby nature reserve.

A seat made from a doorway and enclosing a small niche with a piscina at the back. The carved stone comes from the churches of St. George and St. Lawrence at Stonehouse.

18th century cave used as a watch house, enhanced with an arched stone building after Adelaide's visit, 1827.

Rebuilt from a Norman church in 1239, and enlarged in the 15th century.

  • Red Seat

19th century - a ruinous rest house, sometimes called the Kiosk, which was painted red. Below is another ruined seat known as Indian Cottage or The Verandah.

c.1850 - The stables, dairy, smithy, sawmill and stores, all essential to the running of the estate. The stables are not open to the public.

  • St. Julian's Well

A very small 15th century chapel and holy well, which was restored c.1890.

14th century - a chapel and simple lighthouse, with a beacon site nearby. Across the neck of the headland are the earthworks of an Iron Age fort.

  • West Lodge and Arch

The Arch may have been built to mark the creation of the Viscount in 1781.

This goes around the Country Park.

From around 1760, a Doric pavilion with seats looking across to Plymouth Sound. Verses from Thompson's "The Seasons" are inscribed on the wall.

The Zig-Zag walks were from the 1760s, and became famous in the 19th century as The Horrors. Intricate paths on a dramatic cliff, surrounded by exotic shrubs. The lower cliff paths and some stone seats have been lost to cliff erosion.

[edit] External links