Axmouth and
Axmouth Harbour
In prehistoric times it
was the most important harbour in the West of England, protected by the iron age
hillforts of Hawkesdown and Musbury. The Phoenicians sailed into the River Axe
and it was a significant port in Roman times. Ancient. roadways all led to the
harbour and the Fosse Way ended at Axmouth. The Danes landed an army under Anlaf
in 937, but they were defeated in a large battle at Axminster by King Athelstan.

The monks of Newenham and Sherborne fostered the growth of the harbour in
medieval times. In the 14th century heavy storms caused part of Haven Cliff to
fall and partially block the estuary, and the shingle bank started to build up.
The silt brought down by the river was deposited in the estuary and serious
problems developed. Attempts were made to repair the harbour,
especially
by Thomas Erle and his son Sir Walter Erle of Bindon in the 1600's, but their
efforts were in vain. The Axmouth Harbour Act was passed by Parliament in 1830
and still governs its use today as a scheduled harbour. John Hothersall Hallett
of Stedcombe, the lord of the manor, then constructed a new harbour at his own
expense and this operated commercially until the railway came in 1868. Severe
storms in 1869 and 1914 destroyed part of the quay, the customs house and other
buildings, and the opening of the Axmouth Bridge, the oldest surviving concrete
bridge in England, in 1877 sealed the fate of the harbour. It is now used by
some local fishing boats and private yachts.
Roy Chapple
