Brownsea Island
Brownsea Island is the largest of eight islands in Poole Harbour in Dorset, England. The island is 1.5 miles long and 0.75 miles wide. Much of the island is a Nature Reserve and an important habitat for birds owned by the National Trust. The island is open to the public, but the Trust is able to manage the flow of visitors in the form of boat timetables and in 2002 received 105,938 visitors.
Ecology
Brownsea Island has built up on a bare sand and mud bank deposited in the shallow harbour. Succession has taken place on the island to create topsoil able to support complex ecosystems.
The nature reserve on the island is leased from the National Trust by Dorset Wildlife Trust and includes a brackish lagoon and area of woodland. Other ecosystems on the island include saltmarsh, reedbed, two freshwater lakes, alder carr, coniferous woodland, deciduous woodland and arboretum. The entire island is designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
The island is one of the few places in southern England where red squirrels survive because grey squirrels have never been introduced to the island. Brownsea also has a small ornamental population of peacocks.
There is a large population of sika deer on the island. In the past the numbers have been higher than the island can sustain and have overgrazed. To try and limit damage to trees and other vegetation by deer areas of the island have been fenced off to provide areas of undamaged woodland to allow other species such as red squirrels to thrive.
In the past invasive species such as rhododendrons were introduced to the island but the trusts have cleared many areas.
The island has a heronry, in which both Grey Heron and Little Egret nest.
History
Brownsea Island's story is first recorded in the 7th century, when a hermit living on the island lit beacons to guide boats into the harbour. In 1015 King Canute landed on the island before attempted invasions at nearby Wareham and Hamworthy (Poole).
The island was fortified by Henry VIII, and the castle he built became a parliamentary stronghold in the English civil war. After electricity was installed at the end of the 19th century the castle caught fire and was only partially rebuilt. The National Trust now leases the castle to the John Lewis group who run it as a private hotel.
In the 19th century a brief attempt was made to exploit clay on the island. Buildings were set up at the west end, a pier built and a short tramway constructed. It was hoped that the clay would be of the same quality as the nearby Furzebrook clay, but it turned out to be suitable only for sanitary ware. By 1880 the venture was over, amid implications that the original geological samples had been adulterated with high quality clay. Traces of these activities remain today in the form of archaeological remains (mainly building foundations and pottery fragments) as well as in the ruined worker's village of Maryland, nearly destroyed by bombing during World War II.
From August 1–9, 1907, Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell held the first experimental Scout camp for 22 boys on the island. The subsequent publishing of Scouting for Boys started the Scout Movement.
In the 1930s the owner of the island, Mrs. Mary Bonham-Christie, closed the island to visitors to make it a wildlife sanctuary. This led to the island becoming overgrown, but when the National Trust purchased the island after the owner's death, it was reopened to the public.
In the Second World War lights were placed on the island at night to divert the attention of bombers away from the nearby conurbation of Poole and Bournemouth, army camps on the Purbecks and the important naval base on the Isle of Portland. There are many bomb craters on the island that are havens for rare wildlife.
Since 1964 the island has been host to the Brownsea Open Air Theatre, annually performing the works of William Shakespeare.
External links
- Brownsea Island information at the National Trust
- H2G2: Brownsea Island
- Brownsea and its significance — The world's first Scout Camp
- Brownsea Island Scout Campsite
References
- Dorset County Council, Visitor Numbers at Selected Attractions 1998 to 2002.
- National Trust (See External links).
- Pitt-Rivers, Michael, 1970. Dorset. London: Faber & Faber.