The Jurassic Coast is a Natural World Heritage Site and there is enough cultural richness here to satisfy even the most discerning culture vulture.
Mining and Stone-Working
Let’s start with the area’s rich history of mining and stone-working, geological industries that have been woven into the fabric of the coast and its towns, villages and people across centuries.
Visits to Beer Quarry Caves, Portland Museum and Winspit Quarry all offer fascinating insights into this hard and gruelling activity that defined much of the working life of the Jurassic Coast, and can still be seen in action to this day.
Professional Fossil Collecting
Paired with the coast’s centuries-long history of stone-working is its history of professional fossil collecting, which we’ve collected under the banner of Fossil Conservation.
These palaeo heroes, whose lineage runs from Mary Anning and William Buckland to Steve Etches and Lizzie Hingley, have contributed towards the Jurassic Coast being world-renowned as the birthplace of palaeontology. This ongoing work to rescue, conserve and prepare fossils before the sea claims them forever is represented across the coast through our cohort of outstanding Museums and Visitor Centres.
A Literary Haven
The Jurassic Coast has also served as a literary haven across the years, with renowned authors including Thomas Hardy, Jane Austen, John Fowles and Enid Blyton all finding their voice here at one point or another.
Visit the 800 year-old Cobb in Lyme Regis (setting of Fowles’ The French Lieutenant’s Woman) or one of Hardy’s frost-bitten Wessex landscapes and you’ll see why the coast has always served as an inspiration for the written word. Today, popular annual events such as Bridport Literary Festival and Budleigh Salterton Literature Festival keep the tradition alive.
Human History
In addition to its Mesozoic delights, the Jurassic Coast plays host to remarkable remnants of human history from across the ages. From the Iron Age hillfort of Woodbury Castle in East Devon to Dorchester’s Maumbury Rings – a Neolithic henge - to the spectacular, postcard-ready Corfe Castle, there’s something to satisfy the appetite of any history buff no matter their specialism.
Turning to the 20th century, a visit to Tyneham in Purbeck, The Tank Museum in Bovington or one of the coast’s WWII sites (such as Fort Henry near Swanage) shows there is no shortage of significant recent history on offer here either.