Dunster
Dunster is a medieval town
with a long history. Its fame and wealth were built on its cloth making. The
octagonal wooden yarn-market (see picture) in the centre of Dunster was built in
1609 and for many years after, market day was the biggest event for miles
around.
The town received a Charter from Reginald de Mohun shortly after the Norman
Conquest. Up until the reign of Elizabeth 1 Dunster was a busy port known as
Dunster Haven.
Nowadays the village is very popular with visitors during the summer but retains
its charming, medieval air. There are a number of tea rooms, inns, local craft
shops and an Exmoor National Park Visitor Centre. There is a beach
approx. half
a mile south of the village centre and there is a
West Somerset Steam Railway
Station.
The Castle is best
described by the National Trust, its modern guardians:
" Dramatically sited atop a wooded hill, there has been a castle here
since at least Norman times. The 13th-century gatehouse survives, but the
present building was remodelled in 1868–72 by Antony Salvin for the Luttrell
family, who have lived here for 600 years. The fine oak staircase and
plasterwork of the 17th-century house he adapted can still be seen. There is a
sheltered terrace to the south, on which tender plants and shrubs grow, and
beautiful parkland in which to walk "
Fishing at Dunster
- Bristol Channel Angling site
Dunster's Yarn market
Dunster Castle - National Trust Site
Surfing at Porlock
Dunster's Railway -
West Somerset Railway's site
Bossington Tea gardens
Dunster
Beach Mission
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