Plymouth Hoe

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Coordinates: 50°21′52.09″N, 4°8′31.67″W

Plymouth Hoe from Mount Batten.
Plymouth Hoe from Mount Batten.

Plymouth Hoe, referred to locally as the Hoe, is a large south facing open public space in the English coastal city of Plymouth. The Hoe is adjacent to and above the low limestone cliffs that form the seafront and it commands magnificent views of Plymouth Sound, Drake's Island, and across the Hamoaze to Mount Edgcumbe in Cornwall. The name derives from the Anglo-Saxon word Hoe, a sloping ridge shaped like an inverted foot and heel.

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[edit] History

Until the early 17th century large outline images of the giants Gog and Magog (or Goemagot and Corin) had for a long time been cut into the grass exposing the white limestone beneath.[1] No trace remains today, but this likely commemorates the Cornish foundation myth, being the point from which the Giant was cast into the sea by the hero Corin.

Plymouth Hoe is perhaps best known for the probably apocryphal story that Sir Francis Drake played his famous game of bowls here in 1588 before sailing out with the English fleet to engage with the Spanish Armada.

In the late 1660s, after The Restoration, a large stone fortress known as the Royal Citadel, was built at the eastern end of the Hoe. Its purpose was to protect the port and probably also to intimidate the townsfolk who had leaned towards Parliament during the Civil War.[2]

The Belvedere.
The Belvedere.

From 1880 there was a popular bandstand on the Hoe. It was removed for scrap metal during the Second World War and never rebuilt.[3] A three tier belvedere built in 1891 survives;[4] it was built on the site of a camera obscura, probably built in the 1830s, which showed views of the harbour.[5] Below this site was the Bull Ring (now a memorial garden),[4] and a grand pleasure pier, started in 1880, which provided a dance hall, refreshment, promenading and a landing place for boat trips.[6] The pier was destroyed by German bombing in World War II.

There is an imposing series of Victorian terraces to the west of the naval memorial which previously continued to the Grand Hotel and, until it was destroyed by bombing, the grand clubhouse of the Royal Southern Yacht Club. The club then merged with the Royal Western and occupied the old public steam bath premises by the basin at West Hoe before moving in the late 1980s to Queen Anne Battery.

[edit] Landmarks

Smeaton's Tower, as re-erected on Plymouth Hoe.
Smeaton's Tower, as re-erected on Plymouth Hoe.

A prominent landmark on the Hoe is Smeaton's Tower. This is the upper portion of John Smeaton's Eddystone Lighthouse, which was originally built on the Eddystone Rocks (22.5 km south) in 1759. It was dismantled in 1877 and moved, stone by stone, to the Hoe where it was re-erected.[7]

Smeaton's Tower overlooks Tinside Pool, an unusual 1930s outdoor lido which sits upon the limestone shoreline at the base of the cliff. Most of the works to create the swimming areas and Madiera Road were carried out to make work for the local unemployed during the Depression.

A statue of Sir Francis Drake by Joseph Boehm (a copy of the original in his home town of Tavistock) was placed here in 1884 to commemorate him.[8] There are also several war memorials along the northern side of the Hoe. The largest commemorates the Royal Naval dead of the two world wars; its central obelisk is by Robert Lorimer and was unveiled in 1924, while the surrounding sunken garden was added by Edward Maufe in 1954.[8][9]

The Hoe also includes a long broad tarmacked promenade (currently a disabled motorists car park) which serves as a spectacular military parade ground and which is often used for displays by Plymouth based Royal Navy, Royal Marines, the Army garrison, as well as for funfairs and open-air concerts.

Set into the shape of the southern sea facing fortifications of the Royal Citadel is the world-renowned Marine Biological Laboratory and below and to the east, perched on the rocky foreshore is the clubhouse of the Royal Plymouth Corinthian Yacht Club.

[edit] Tourism

The statue of Francis Drake showing the Hoe's elevated position relative to the city centre behind.
The statue of Francis Drake showing the Hoe's elevated position relative to the city centre behind.

The Hoe is a popular area for Plymothians and visitors. There is always a great deal of activity on the water, including frequent warship movements, ferries going and coming from France and Spain, fishing trawlers and a swarm of larger and smaller sailing boats. The Fastnet yacht race ends here. There are annual three day national firework championships attracting tens of thousands of spectators.

For forty years, there has been controversy about development on the edges of the Hoe green space. The erection of two discount hotel chain box buildings, at the southern end of Armada Way and the other at the Sound end of Leigham Street, contrast with their Victorian surroundings. Application has been made to turn the Grand into flats and the long derelict yacht club site has now been filled by a modern block of flats. The Plymouth Dome, an idiosyncratic turret and domed building, built into a very small old quarry site above Tinside as an historical theme tourist attraction, failed to attract enough tourists or locals and has closed but may be converted into a cafeteria.

[edit] See also

  • Hooe, Plymouth, a small suburb of Plymstock located beside Hooe Lake.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gray, Todd (2003). Lost Devon: Creation, Change and Destruction over 500 Years. Exeter, Devon: The Mint Press, 153 An early and explicit reference is made in Richard Carew (1555), The Survey of Cornwall, text here:[1] N.B. Carew refers to Plymouth Hoe as the Hawe at Plymmouth. ISBN 1-90335-632-6. A receipt In the city archive there is for a bill paid by the Earl of Mount Edgecumbe for the weeding and cleaning of the giant.[citation needed]
  2. ^ Bridget Cherry & Nikolaus Pevsner (1989). The Buildings of England — Devon. Harmondsworth [Eng.]: Penguin, 648. ISBN 0 14 071050 7. 
  3. ^ Plymouth, Hoe Bandstand. www.plymouthdata.info. Retrieved on 2008-03-03.
  4. ^ a b Plymouth, Belvedere and Bull Ring. www.plymouthdata.info. Retrieved on 2008-03-03.
  5. ^ Plymouth, Camera Obscura, The Hoe. www.plymouthdata.info. Retrieved on 2008-03-03.
  6. ^ Plymouth, Promenade Pier. www.plymouthdata.info. Retrieved on 2008-03-03.
  7. ^ Eddystone Lighthouse. Trinity House. Retrieved on September 6, 2006.
  8. ^ a b Bridget Cherry & Nikolaus Pevsner (1989). The Buildings of England — Devon. Harmondsworth [Eng.]: Penguin, 665. ISBN 0 14 071050 7. 
  9. ^ Plymouth, Naval War Memorial. plymouthdata.info. Retrieved on 2008-03-02.

[edit] External links