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Weymouth & Portland at Work is a fascinating pictorial history of the working life of the Dorset towns of Weymouth and Portland in the last hundred and more years.
With Weymouth and Portland hosting the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games sailing events, the profile of the area will be raised considerably in the years leading up to the Games. Weymouth's seaside history and heritage will be a focus of attention and will contribute significantly to the regeneration of the town in the coming years. Weymouth has been a popular seaside resort for over 250 years. Likened to Montpelier and Naples for its natural beauty and healthy climate, it received the endorsement of King George III. His presence helped the town to expand rapidly in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, resulting in a stunning legacy of seafront terraces that continue to provide accommodation for thousands of holidaymakers each year. Weymouth boasts an eclectic mix of medieval town planning, harbour-side industry and former military sites that have had an impact on the town's development as a seaside resort. Many of the buildings associated with declining brewing and maritime industries have now been redeveloped and serve as amenities and accommodation for residents and visitors. An English Heritage opinion poll in 2007 found that seventy-five per cent of respondents felt that 'the historic character of seaside towns is what makes them beautiful and enjoyable'. This book describes the colourful story of Weymouth's seaside history and the buildings and open spaces that survive to tell this story. It also demonstrates how the historic environment can play an important part in the future development of the town.
From the bestselling author of Lucy in the Sky and Chasing Daisy, there are two soulmates, but three broken hearts in this “refreshing take on the happy-ever-after tale” (Marie Claire). “Do you still love him?” Every second of every minute of every hour of every day… Alice is eighteen and about to start university while Joe’s life is seemingly going nowhere. A Dorset summer, a chance meeting, and the two of them fall into step as if they have known each other forever. But their idyll is shattered, suddenly, unexpectedly. Alice heads off to Cambridge and slowly picks up the pieces of her broken heart. Joe is gone; she cannot find him. When she catches the attention of Lukas—gorgeous, gifted, rich boy Lukas—she is carried along by his charm, swept up in his ambitious plans for a future together. Then Joe is there, once more, but out of reach in a way that Alice could never have imagined. Life has moved on, the divide between them is now so great. Surely it is far too late to relive those perfect summer days of long ago? If you fall too fast you might just crash…
Drawing on his own vivid childhood memories of the seaside town of Weymouth, Powys creates a striking collection of human oddities, through which he shows his deep sympathy for the variety, eccentricity and loneliness of human beings.
Nothe Fort and Beyond tells the story of the Nothe peninsula which rises majestically above Weymouth's harbour with Portland Roads and Newton's Cove on the other. The story starts with the time of Henry VIII and his Master Gunner up through the centuries until the mid-Victorian era, when it was requisitioned by the Government and became a fully-fledged military site. A bustling barrack block already stood atop the Nothe, built at the end of the 18th century to house King George III's troops, over the years it became a temporary home to many a regiment...some good...some not so good. The fort we see today was constructed by the Royal Engineers, but that was only after a few false starts, the ground it was built on being notoriously unstable. Part of the Victorian Portland Safe Harbour project, it involved not only the construction of Weymouth's Nothe Fort but also Portland's Verne Citadel, breakwaters and the government's stone quarries which were worked by convicts from the newly built prison. This was during a time of continual conflict with France and Napoleon's ever expanding military and naval forces just across the waters. Here's your chance to immerse yourself into the often-harsh lives of those who were involved in the forts construction. The Victorian soldiers and their families and the convicts slaving away over on Portland watched over by their guards. Meet the captains and their officers, men who revelled in Weymouth's high society and wooed the women, or the hard-working sappers who built this windswept edifice but still found time to get into mischief and those theatrical-loving artillerymen that later installed and manned its great guns. Find out what life was really like for the women and children who followed in their soldier's wake, having to share draughty barrack rooms with rumbustious fellows, spending hours repairing uniforms or scrubbing soldiers' washing to survive. Of course, with those soldiers and their women perched high on the headland and the many who arrived to spend time under canvas, life was certainly never going to be dull for Weymouth's residents. History and personal stories interweave as one in my book. Why not enter their world and witness their lives...
Weymouth at War tells the story of Ron Hill and his vessel My Girl, and how they helped carry soldiers and ammunition to the Breakwaters guarding the Naval Base at Portland during World War 2.