
Country park
Mount Edgcumbe country park was the earliest landscaped park in Cornwall. Today it is made up of Grade I listed gardens and 55 Grade II and II* listed structures.
Some of the features of the park are:
- Barn Pool
A sheltered deep water anchorage used by Vikings in 997. Offshore is the shipwreck Catharina von Flensburg, 1786.
- Barrow
c.1200 BC - a Bronze Age burial mound, re-used as a "Prospect Mound" in the 18th century. A prospect mound is an artificial mound, generally conical, placed within a garden or park to provide a viewing point to overlook the garden or park.
- Blockhouse
c.1545 - a small fort built on the shoreline in King Henry VIII's reign, to defend the mouth of the Tamar and the Edgcumbe's town of Stonehouse opposite.
- Coastguard Station at Rame
Originally a Lloyds Signal Station, where signaling was done from passing ships to the station by flags during the day and by lights at night, it became a radio station in 1905, then transferred to the Coastguards c.1925. It is now run by Coastwatch.
- Cremyll Ferry
c.1204 - a major ferry crossing between Devon and Cornwall since Medieval times.
- Deer Wall
c.1695 - a stone wall with outer ditch to protect the Amphitheatre from deer, now incomplete.
- Earl's Drive
In early days called the Terrace. A driveway from the House round the coast to Maker Church by 1788, extended to Penlee Point by 1823.
- Folly
1747 - an artificial ruin which replaced a navigation obelisk. Built from Medieval stone from the churches of St. George and St. Lawrence, Stonehouse.
- Formal Gardens
c.1750 to 1820 - gardens in Italian, English and French styles. New Zealand, American (1989) and Jubilee Gardens (2003) have been added.
- Garden Battery
c.1747 and 1863 - an 18th century saluting platform, originally mounted with 21 guns to greet visitors. Completely re-built 1863 as part of Plymouth's defences.
- Harbour View Seat
18th century - a much damaged ornamental seat also known as White Seat, with a magnificent view north up the River Tamar.
- Higher Deer House
19th century - in the Grotton Plantation the ruins of a two storey fodder store for deer; and the ruined 18th century Pebble Seat facing south.
- Ice House
c.1800 - under the bridge leading to the House (only open on special occasions).
- Maker Church
First mentioned in 1186, enlarged in the 15th century. The family church of the Edgcumbes.
- Milton's Temple
1755 - a circular Ionic temple, with a plaque inscribed with lines from the poem Paradise Lost, "overhead up grew, Insuperable heights of loftiest shade....." John Milton, (1608 - 1674).
- The Orangery
Situated in the Italian Garden the Orangery is thought to have been built as early as 1760. The building is now a fully licensed restaurant.
- Penlee Battery
1892 - the remains of a Victorian fort armed with 3 guns in both World Wars. A granite sculpture by Greg Powlesland, 1995, is in this nature reserve.
- Picklecombe Seat
A seat made from a Medieval doorway and enclosing a small niche with a piscina at the back. The carved stone comes from the churches of St. George and St. Lawrence at Stonehouse.
- Queen Adelaide's Grotto
18th century cave used as a watch house, enhanced with an arched stone building after Adelaide's visit, 1827.
- Rame Church
Rebuilt from a Norman church in 1239, and enlarged in the 15th century.
- Red Seat
19th century - a ruinous rest house, sometimes called the Kiosk, which was painted red. Below is another ruined seat known as Indian Cottage or The Verandah.
- Stables
c.1850 - The stables, dairy, smithy, sawmill and stores, all essential to the running of the estate. (not open to the public).
- St. Julian's Well
Tiny 15th century chapel and holy well, restored c.1890.
- St. Michael's Chapel
14th century - A chapel and simple lighthouse, with a beacon site nearby. Across the neck of the headland are the earthworks of an Iron Age fort.
- West Lodge and Arch
The Arch may have been built to mark the creation of the Viscount in 1781.
- South West Coastal Footpath
This goes through Mount Edgcumbe
- Thompson's Seat
c1760 - a Doric pavilion with seats looking across to Plymouth Sound. Verses from Thompson's "The Seasons" are inscribed on the wall.
- Zig-Zags
c.1760 - the Zig-Zag walks were famous in the 18th and 19th century as "The Horrors". Intricate paths on a dramatic cliff, surrounded by exotic shrubs. The lower cliff paths and some stone seats have been lost in cliff falls.
- Deer on Peninsula
In 1515 Sir Piers Edgcumbe was given permission by King Henry VIII to empark deer. Their descendents roam freely on the Peninsula to this day.
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