Tag Archives: Sugar Lookout

Poets’ Walk, Clevedon

The town of Clevedon has connections to two of England’s best known poets.

Poets' Walk signpost
Poets’ Walk signpost

Poets’ Walk is a popular footpath which runs along the coast and around Wain’s Hill and Church Hill at the southern end of Clevedon.  The walk is said to have inspired poets such as Alfred Tennyson , Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Makepeace Thackeray, who visited the town.  The formal path which exists today was constructed in 1929. Poets’ Walk was designated as a Local Nature Reserve in 1993.

Poets' Walk looking north towards Town
Poets’ Walk looking north towards Town
Poets' Walk, Clevedon 1
Poets’ Walk
Poets' Walk, Clevedon 2
Poets’ Walk

 

Sugar Lookout Point, Clevedon
Sugar Lookout

 

The Sugar Lookout is a feature on Poets’ Walk. It was built by Ferdinand Beeston in around 1835.  It is said to have been used in the mid-19 th century by a family of sugar importers called Finzel to look out for ships sailing up the Bristol Channel, which were carrying sugar from the West Indies.  It later fell into ruin but has recently been restored.

 

Coleridge Cottage,Old Church Road, Clevedon
Cottage on Old Church Road where the Coleridges stayed

Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his wife Sarah spent the first few months of their married life in a cottage on Old Church Road in Clevedon in 1795.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the mid-18 th century the author William Makepeace Thackeray was a frequent visitor of the Elton Family, who lived at Clevedon Court.  He is best known as a novelist but he did also write some poetry.

Alfred Tennyson had a close friend at Cambridge University called Arthur Hallam.  Arthur’s mother was a member of the Elton family of Clevedon Court.  Arthur, who was a poet and essayist, was engaged to marry Tennyson’s sister Emily but he died suddenly in Vienna in 1833 at the age of 22.  His body was brought back to England and he was buried in the family vault at St Andrew’s Church in Clevedon.  In 1850 Tennyson wrote a poem called In Memorium in tribute to his friend.  In the same year he made his first visit to Clevedon.  The house on Old Church Road in Clevedon, where he is said to have stayed, is called Tennyson House.   A nearby road is called Tennyson Avenue.

St Andrew's Church, Clevedon
St Andrew’s Church, Clevedon
Tennyson House in Clevedon
Tennyson House, Old Church Road, Clevedon
Tennyson Avenue street sign, Clevedon
Tennyson Avenue