Willapark (Boscastle)

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50°41′20″N 4°42′11″W / 50.689°N 4.703°W / 50.689; -4.703

Willapark

Willapark (grid reference SX090913) is a 317-foot high promontory just south of Boscastle on the north coast of Cornwall in South West England. It is the site of an Iron Age hill fort and a small nineteenth century folly, now a coastguard lookout.

The headland is joined to the mainland by a narrow isthmus. Iron Age tribesmen built a wall or bank fronted by a ditch across the land bridge, giving themselves a secure clifftop castle.[1] The earthworks were probably dug sometime around 200 BC. The headland appears too rocky to support permanent occupation and may have been used to protect harvested crops from raiders and as a stronghold in which to retreat during enemy attacks. Small earthworks known as “pillow mounds” are the remains of manmade rabbit warrens daring from the Tudor era.[2]

It has a single 110 metres (360 ft) straight bank, indistinct to the south-west and up to 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in) high, with a ditch on the landward side at its north-eastern end. The present path onto the headland may indicate the original entrance. The fort overlooks Forrabury Common, a medieval field system.[3]

The Lookout

Wreck of the Jessie Logan

References

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