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{{infobox UK place||country = England|official_name= Isle of Portland|map_type = Dorset|latitude= 50.550|longitude= -2.440|population = 12,710This figure is an estimate for mid 2005. The most recent exact figure is 12,800, from the 2001 census.|shire_district= Weymouth and Portland|region= South West England|constituency_westminster= [South Dorset (UK Parliament constituency)|post_town= Portland|postcode_district = DT5|postcode_area= DT|dial_code= 01305|os_grid_reference= SY690721-->
The
Isle of Portland is a limestone island long by wide in the
English Channel. Portland is south of the resort of Weymouth, forming the southernmost point of the counties of England of
Dorset, in
England, United Kingdom. Chesil Beach connects the island to the mainland, and the
A354 road bridge connects to Weymouth, which together form the borough of Weymouth and Portland. The population of the island is almost 13,000.
Portland is a central part of the
Jurassic Coast, a
World Heritage Site on the Dorset and east Devon coast, important for its geology and landforms. The name of the island is used for one of the British Sea Areas, and has been
Portland as the name of North American and Australian towns.
Portland limestone is still quarried here, and is used in British architecture, including St Paul's Cathedral and Buckingham Palace.
The large, deep artificial
Portland Harbour on Portland's northern shore was an important
Royal Navy base during
World War I and
World War II; the Royal Navy and
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation trained in its waters until the 1990s. The harbour is a small civilian port and popular recreation area; the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy will host the sailing events for the 2012 Olympic Games.
History
Portland has been inhabited since at least the
Mesolithic period (the Middle
Stone Age)—there is archaeological evidence of Mesolithic inhabitants near
Portland Bill, and of inhabitation of the island in ages since. The
Roman Empire occupied Portland; they reputedly called the island
Vindelis. In 1539 Henry VIII of England ordered the construction of
Portland Castle to defend the island from attacks by the
French people; the castle cost the king £4,964. It is one of the best preserved castles from this period, and is open to the public under the administration of English Heritage.
Sir Christopher Wren, the notable architect and Member of Parliament for nearby Weymouth, used six million tons of white
Portland limestone to rebuild destroyed parts of London after the Great Fire of London. Well-known buildings in the capital, including St Paul's Cathedral and the eastern front of Buckingham Palace feature the stone. After
World War I a quarry was opened by
The Crown Estate to provide stone for the Whitehall Cenotaph and half a million gravestones for war cemeteries, and after
World War II hundreds of thousands of gravestones were carved for the fallen soldiers of the
Western Front. Portland Cement is not manufactured on the island; the strong cement mix was a German invention, and was named Portland Cement due to its similar colour to Portland stone when mixed with lime and sand.
have produced work there.
Portland harbour is one of the deepest man-made harbours in the world at around , and the second largest at . The first stone of the
Breakwater (structure) was laid by
Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha in 1849, and the last by
Edward VII of the United Kingdom,
Prince of Wales, in 1872. They were constructed mainly by civilians, but the stone was quarried by convicts—22 men lost their lives during their construction, and by completion the breakwaters contained 5,731,376
long tons of stone and cost GBP1,167,852. The harbour and
Weymouth Bay have an unusual feature: a double low tide, caused by the time it takes for water to pass Portland Bill.
Portland Harbour has housed Royal Navy bases since 1919, the first named HMS Serepta. During
World War II Portland was the target of heavy bombing, because Navy ships were berthed in its harbour. To protect the harbour from torpedo and submarine attack, HMS Hood (1891) was sunk in the passage between the southern breakwaters. In 1946 local playing fields were turned into a heliport, and in 1959 the station was formally commissioned as
RNAS Portland (HMS Osprey); the base was gradually improved with landing areas and one of England's shortest runways, at . There are still two prisons on Portland,
Verne (HM Prison) and HMYOI Portland, and the harbour contains Britain's only
prison ship,
Weare (HM Prison), still berthed in the port after its closure in 2005.
The naval base closed at the end of the Cold War in 1995, and the Royal Naval Air Station closed in 1999, although the runway remained in use for
Her Majesty's Coastguard Search and Rescue flights as MRCC Portland. MRCC Portland's area of responsibility extends midway across the
English Channel, and from
Start Point, Devon in Devon to the Dorset/Hampshire border, covering an area of around . The 12 Search and Rescue teams in the Portland area dealt with almost 1000 incidents in 2005; most teams use
lifeboats but the Portland crew use a Sikorsky S-61 helicopter.
Railway
branch lines have ran on Portland since the early 19th century. The Merchant's Railway was the earliest—it opened in 1826 (one year after the Stockton and Darlington railway), and ran from the quarries at the north of Tophill to the docks in
Castletown, Dorset, where Portland stone was shipped around the country. The
Portland Branch Railway was laid in 1865, and ran from a station in Melcombe Regis, across the Fleet and along Chesil Beach to Victoria Square station in
Chiswell. The line continued as the Easton and Church Hope Railway, running through Castletown and ascendeing the cliffs at East Weares, to loop back north to a station in Easton, Dorset. The line closed to passengers in March 1965, and the final goods train ran in April that year.
Coastal flooding has affected Chiswell for centuries—the village lies below
sea level next to Chesil Cove of Chesil Beach. In autumn and winter Chesil Beach faces severe storms and massive waves, which have a
fetch (geography) across the
Atlantic Ocean. Following two severe flood events in the 1970s, Weymouth and Portland Borough Council and
Wessex Water decided to investigate the structure of the beach, and possible coastal management schemes that could be built to protect Chiswell. In the 1980s it was agreed that a scheme to protect against a
return period storm would be practicable; it would reduce flood depth and duration in more severe storms.
Coastal defence#Hard construction techniques techniques were employed in the scheme, including a
gabion beach crest running to the north of Chiswell, an extended
sea wall next to Chiswell, and a
culvert running from inside the beach, underneath Portland Beach Road and into
Portland Harbour, to divert flood water away from low lying areas.
Rabbits have been associated with bad luck for centuries on Portland; use of the name is still taboo—the creatures are often referred to as "Underground Mutton", "Long-Eared Furry Things" or just "bunnies". The fear of the word is believed to derive from quarry workers; they would see rabbits emerging from their burrows immediately before a rock fall and blame them for increasing the risk of dangerous, sometimes deadly, landslides. There have been cave-ins, and in one instance a
crane (machine) operator died when his crane toppled on weak ground above the burrows. If a rabbit was seen in a quarry, the workers would pack up and go home for the day, until the safety of the area had been assured.
Even today older Portland residents are offended or go quiet at the mention of rabbits; this
superstition came to national attention in October 2005 when a special batch of
movie poster were made for the
Wallace and Gromit film,
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. In respect of local beliefs the adverts omitted the word 'rabbit' and replaced the film's title with the phrase
"Something bunny is going on".
Politics and demographics
Portland is an ancient Royal Manor, and until the 19th century remained a separate
Liberty (division) within Dorset for administration. The island was an
urban district from 1894 to 1974, until the borough of Weymouth and Portland formed on 1 April
1974, under the
Local Government Act 1972. This merged the borough of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis and the Portland urban district.
The Mayor of Weymouth and Portland is David Harris (
Liberal Democrats), and Tim Munro (
Independent politician#United Kingdom) is Deputy Mayor and Mayor of Portland Town Council. Weymouth, Portland and the
Purbeck (district) district are in the
Dorset South United Kingdom constituencies, created in 1885. The constituency elects one
Member of Parliament; the current MP is
Jim Knight (Labour Party (UK)), the Minister of State for Schools.
{]s, giving an approximate population density of 11 residents per hectare. The population is almost entirely native to
England—96.8% of residents are of White British background. House prices on Portland are lower than in Weymouth, but still above the UK average—the average price of a detached house in 2006 was GBP255,921;
semi-detached and
Terraced house houses were cheaper, at £168,995 and £157,403 respectively, and an average
apartment or maisonette cost £108,020 in the same year.These figures are for July to September in 2006, and may be affected by a low number of sales.
Crime rates on the island are below that of Weymouth and the
United Kingdom—there were 9.1 burglaries per 1000 people in 2005 and 2006; which is higher than South West England (8.9 per 1000) but lower than England and Wales (13.5 per 1000). Unemployment levels are low, at 1.8% of the economically active population in 2006, compared to the United Kingdom average of 5.4%.
Geography, geology and ecology
limestone.The Isle of Portland lies in the
English Channel, to the south of the resort of Weymouth, forming the southernmost point in Dorset. Portland situated approximately half-way along the
UNESCO Jurassic Coast
World Heritage Site; the site includes of the Dorset and east Devon coast that is important for its geology and
landforms. The South West Coast Path runs around the island, it is the United Kingdom's longest
Long-distance footpaths in the UK at . Portland is unusual as it is connected to the mainland at Abbotsbury by Chesil Beach, a
tombolo which runs north-west to West Bay, Dorset. This feature is often incorrectly defined as a peninsula or a tombolo—Portland is a 'tied' island, and Chesil Beach is its tombolo.
Geologically, Portland is separated into two areas; the steeply sloping land at the north end of the island called
Underhill, Dorset, and the larger, gently sloping land to the south, called Tophill. Portland stone lies under Tophill; the strata decline at a shallow angle of around 1.5 degrees, from a height of near
Verne (HM Prison) in the north, to just above sea level at
Portland Bill. The geology of Underhill is different to Tophill; Underhill lies on a steep escarpment composed of Portland Sand, lying above a thicker layer of Kimmeridge Clay, which extends to Chesil Beach and Portland Harbour. This Kimmeridge Clay has resulted in a series of landslides, forming West Weares and East Weares.
Portland Stone houses in Fortuneswell, Underhill.There are eight settlements on Portland, the largest being Fortuneswell in Underhill and
Easton, Dorset in Tophill.
Castletown, Dorset and Chiswell are the other villages in Underhill, and Weston, Dorset,
Southwell, Dorset, Wakeham and the Grove occupy Tophill. Older buildings on the island are built out of Portland Stone; houses have walls 30–60centimetre (1–2 foot (unit of length)) thick, and a similar layout governed by the culture and living standards at the time they were built. Most houses have not been painted and retain the yellow-grey colour of the stone, giving the island a different character to the mainland.
Portland Bill should not be confused with the Isle of Portland—Portland Bill is a narrow promontory of Portland stone which forms the most southerly part of Tophill. The Bill has three
lighthouses; it is an important way-point for ships passing the island and its
tidal race. The current lighthouse was refurbished in 1996 and became computer-controlled; a visitor's centre giving information and guided tours of the lighthouse was built nearby. Two earlier lighthouses stand further inland, one is an important observatory used by
ornithology, providing records of bird migration and accommodation for visitors.
Portland Ledge (the Shambles) is an underwater extension of Portland Stone into the
English Channel at a place where the depth of Channel is to . Tidal flow is disrupted by the feature, at deep and long it causes a tidal race to the south of Portland Bill. The current only stops for brief periods during the twelve and half hour tidal cycle and can reach at the spring tide of .
Due to its isolated coastal location, the Isle of Portland has an extensive range of flora and fauna; the coastline and disused quarries are designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Sea and migratory birds occupy the island in different seasons, sometimes these include rare species which draw
ornithologists from around the country. Rare visitors to the surrounding seas include dolphins, seals and basking sharks. Chesil Beach is one of only two sites in Britain where the Scaly Cricket can be found; unlike any other cricket it is wingless and does not sing or hop.
The comparatively warm and sunny climate of the island allows species of plants to thrive which do not on the mainland. The limestone soil has low nutrient levels; hence smaller species of wild flowers and grasses are able to grow in the absence of larger species. Portland Sea Lavender can be found on the higher sea cliffs—unique to Portland it is one of the
United Kingdom's rarest plants. The wild flowers and plants make an excellent habitat for butterflies; over half of the British Isles' 57 butterfly species can be seen on the island, including varieties that migrate from mainland Europe. Species live on Portland that are rare in the United Kingdom, including the unique Silver Studded Blue.
Climate
The mild seas which surround the island produce a
temperate climate (
Koppen climate classification#GROUP C: Temperate/mesothermal climates Cfb) with a small variation in daily and annual temperatures. The average annual mean temperature from 1971 to 2000 was 10.2 to 12 Celsius. The warmest month is August, with an average
temperature range of 13.3 °C to 20.4 °C, and the coolest month is February, with a temperature range of 3.1 °C to 8.3 °C.Maximum and minimum temperatures throughout the year are above the England average, and Portland is in Hardiness zone#Benefits and criticisms. Areas in American Horticultural Society Heat zone 2 experience one to seven days per year with maximum temperatures above 30 °C. Mean sea surface temperatures in nearby Weymouth range from 7.0 °C in February to 17.2 °C in August.
The borough of Weymouth and Portland, along with the rest of the South Coast, often has the sunniest weather in Britain. Weymouth and Portland averaged 1768.4 hours of sunshine annually between 1971 and 2000, which is just under 40% of the maximum possible,The maximum hours of sunshine possible in one year is approximately 4476 hours. and 32% above the Climate of the United Kingdom of 1339.7 hours. December is the cloudiest month, with an average of 55.7 hours of sunshine, and July is the sunniest month, averaging 235.1 hours; sunshine totals in all months are well above the United Kingdom average. The wettest month is December, with an average of 90.9 millimetre of rainfall, and the driest month is July, averaging 35.6 mm. The average annual rainfall of 751.7 mm is well below the United Kingdom average of 1125.0 mm, and monthly rainfall totals throughout the year are less than the UK average. Portland is less affected by the Atlantic storms that Devon and Cornwall experience.
The mild seas that surround Portland act to keep night-time temperatures above freezing, making winter frost rare: on average eight times a year—this is far below the United Kingdom's average annual total of 55.6 days of frost. Days with snow lying are equally rare: on average zero to six days a year. Almost all winters have one day or less with snow lying; it may snow or
sleet a couple of times in a winter, yet it almost never settles on the ground—coastal areas in the south west such as Portland experience the mildest winters in the UK. The growing season in Weymouth and Portland lasts from nine to twelve months a year,The growing season in the United Kingdom is defined as starting on the day after five consecutive days with mean temperatures above 5 °C. The season finishes the day after mean temperatures are below 5 °C for five consecutive days. and the borough is in Hardiness zone 9. Areas in Hardiness zone 9 experience an average lowest recorded temperature each year between -1 and -7 °C.
Sport and recreation
, seen from The Verne; the
Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy is on the left.In 2000, the
Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy was built in Osprey Quay in Underhill as a centre for sailing in the United Kingdom. Weymouth Bay were credited by the
Royal Yachting Association as the best in Northern Europe. Weymouth and Portland regularly host local, national and international sailing events in their waters; these include the J/24 World Championships in 2005, trials for the 2004 Athens Olympics, the ISAF World Championship 2006, the BUSA Fleet Racing Championships, and the RYA Youth National Championships.
In 2005, the WPNSA was selected to host sailing events at the
2012 Summer Olympic Games—mainly because the Academy had recently been built, so no new venue would need to be provided. However, as part of the South West of England Regional Development Agency's plans to redevelop Osprey Quay, a new 600-berth marina and an extension with more on-site facilities will be built. Construction is scheduled between August 2007 and the end of 2008, therefore Weymouth and Portland will be the first in the United Kingdom to finish building a venue for the Olympic Games.
The waters of
Weymouth Bay and
Portland Harbour are used for other water sports—the reliable wind is favourable for
windsurfing and
kitesurfing. Chesil beach and Portland Harbour are used regularly for angling, diving to shipwrecks, snorkelling, canoeing, and swimming. The limestone cliffs and quarries are used for rock climbing; Portland has areas for bouldering and deep water soloing, however sport climbing with bolt protection is the most common style on the island.
In literature
In
The Warlord Chronicles,
Bernard Cornwell suggests that Portland was the Isle of the Dead (mythology), a place of internal exile, where the causeway was guarded to keep the 'dead' (people suffering insanity) from crossing
the Fleet and returning back to the mainland. However, there is no archaeological evidence of such occurrences.
Thomas Hardy called Portland the
Isle of Slingers in his novels; the isle was the main setting of
The Well-Beloved, and was featured in
The Trumpet-Major. Islanders were expert stone-throwers in the defence of their island, and Hardy's
Isle of Slingers is heavily based on Portland; the
Street of Wells representing Fortuneswell and
The Beal as Portland Bill. Hardy named Portland the
Gibraltar of the North, with reference to the island's similarities with Gibraltar; its physical geography, isolation, comparatively mild climate, and
Underhill, Dorset's winding streets.
References and notes
External links
- Map sources for grid reference .
- Weymouth & Portland borough council
- History of Portland
- Southampton University's Dorset Geology
- Portland history map
- Portland Sculpture & Quarry Trust
- Portland pictures, history and information
Photographs
- Portland Gallery
- Pictures of England: Portland
- Pictures of Portland Bill
- Portland pictures from the Steps in Time Archive
Further reading
- Stuart Morris, 1985 Portland, an Illustrated History The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 0-946159-34-3
- Stuart Morris, 1998 Portland (Discover Dorset Series) The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 1-874336-49-0.
- Jackson, Brian L. 1999. Isle of Portland railways. ISBN 0853615403
- Palmer, Susann. 1999. Ancient Portland: Archaeology of the Isle. Portland: S. Palmer. ISBN 0953281108
- Stuart Morris, 2002 Portland: A Portrait in Colour The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 1-874336-91-1.
- Stuart Morris, 2006 Portland, Then and Now The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 1-904349-48-X.
{{infobox UK place||country = England|official_name= Isle of Portland|map_type = Dorset|latitude= 50.550|longitude= -2.440|population = 12,710This figure is an estimate for mid 2005. The most recent exact figure is 12,800, from the 2001 census.|shire_district= Weymouth and Portland|region= South West England|constituency_westminster= [South Dorset (UK Parliament constituency)|post_town= Portland|postcode_district = DT5|postcode_area= DT|dial_code= 01305|os_grid_reference= SY690721-->
The
Isle of Portland is a limestone island long by wide in the
English Channel. Portland is south of the resort of Weymouth, forming the southernmost point of the
counties of England of
Dorset, in England,
United Kingdom.
Chesil Beach connects the island to the mainland, and the A354 road bridge connects to Weymouth, which together form the borough of
Weymouth and Portland. The population of the island is almost 13,000.
Portland is a central part of the Jurassic Coast, a
World Heritage Site on the Dorset and east Devon coast, important for its geology and landforms. The name of the island is used for one of the British Sea Areas, and has been Portland as the name of North American and Australian towns.
Portland limestone is still quarried here, and is used in British architecture, including
St Paul's Cathedral and Buckingham Palace.
The large, deep artificial
Portland Harbour on Portland's northern shore was an important Royal Navy base during
World War I and
World War II; the Royal Navy and North Atlantic Treaty Organisation trained in its waters until the 1990s. The harbour is a small civilian port and popular recreation area; the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy will host the sailing events for the
2012 Olympic Games.
History
Portland has been inhabited since at least the
Mesolithic period (the Middle Stone Age)—there is
archaeological evidence of Mesolithic inhabitants near
Portland Bill, and of inhabitation of the island in ages since. The
Roman Empire occupied Portland; they reputedly called the island
Vindelis. In 1539
Henry VIII of England ordered the construction of
Portland Castle to defend the island from attacks by the
French people; the castle cost the king £4,964. It is one of the best preserved castles from this period, and is open to the public under the administration of English Heritage.
Sir
Christopher Wren, the notable architect and Member of Parliament for nearby Weymouth, used six million tons of white Portland limestone to rebuild destroyed parts of London after the
Great Fire of London. Well-known buildings in the capital, including St Paul's Cathedral and the eastern front of
Buckingham Palace feature the stone. After
World War I a quarry was opened by The Crown Estate to provide stone for the Whitehall
Cenotaph and half a million gravestones for war cemeteries, and after World War II hundreds of thousands of gravestones were carved for the fallen soldiers of the
Western Front. Portland Cement is not manufactured on the island; the strong cement mix was a German invention, and was named Portland Cement due to its similar colour to Portland stone when mixed with lime and sand.
have produced work there.
Portland harbour is one of the deepest man-made harbours in the world at around , and the second largest at . The first stone of the
Breakwater (structure) was laid by
Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha in 1849, and the last by Edward VII of the United Kingdom,
Prince of Wales, in 1872. They were constructed mainly by civilians, but the stone was quarried by convicts—22 men lost their lives during their construction, and by completion the breakwaters contained 5,731,376 long tons of stone and cost
GBP1,167,852. The harbour and Weymouth Bay have an unusual feature: a double low tide, caused by the time it takes for water to pass Portland Bill.
Portland Harbour has housed Royal Navy bases since 1919, the first named HMS Serepta. During World War II Portland was the target of heavy bombing, because Navy ships were berthed in its harbour. To protect the harbour from torpedo and submarine attack,
HMS Hood (1891) was sunk in the passage between the southern breakwaters. In 1946 local playing fields were turned into a heliport, and in 1959 the station was formally commissioned as RNAS Portland (HMS Osprey); the base was gradually improved with landing areas and one of
England's shortest runways, at . There are still two prisons on Portland, Verne (HM Prison) and
HMYOI Portland, and the harbour contains Britain's only
prison ship,
Weare (HM Prison), still berthed in the port after its closure in 2005.
The naval base closed at the end of the
Cold War in 1995, and the Royal Naval Air Station closed in 1999, although the runway remained in use for
Her Majesty's Coastguard Search and Rescue flights as MRCC Portland. MRCC Portland's area of responsibility extends midway across the English Channel, and from Start Point, Devon in
Devon to the Dorset/Hampshire border, covering an area of around . The 12 Search and Rescue teams in the Portland area dealt with almost 1000 incidents in 2005; most teams use lifeboats but the Portland crew use a Sikorsky S-61 helicopter.
Railway branch lines have ran on Portland since the early 19th century. The Merchant's Railway was the earliest—it opened in 1826 (one year after the Stockton and Darlington railway), and ran from the quarries at the north of Tophill to the docks in Castletown, Dorset, where Portland stone was shipped around the country. The Portland Branch Railway was laid in 1865, and ran from a station in
Melcombe Regis, across the Fleet and along Chesil Beach to Victoria Square station in
Chiswell. The line continued as the Easton and Church Hope Railway, running through Castletown and ascendeing the cliffs at East Weares, to loop back north to a station in
Easton, Dorset. The line closed to passengers in March 1965, and the final goods train ran in April that year.
Coastal flooding has affected Chiswell for centuries—the village lies below
sea level next to
Chesil Cove of Chesil Beach. In autumn and winter Chesil Beach faces severe storms and massive waves, which have a
fetch (geography) across the
Atlantic Ocean. Following two severe flood events in the 1970s,
Weymouth and Portland Borough Council and Wessex Water decided to investigate the structure of the beach, and possible
coastal management schemes that could be built to protect Chiswell. In the 1980s it was agreed that a scheme to protect against a return period storm would be practicable; it would reduce flood depth and duration in more severe storms. Coastal defence#Hard construction techniques techniques were employed in the scheme, including a gabion beach crest running to the north of Chiswell, an extended
sea wall next to Chiswell, and a
culvert running from inside the beach, underneath Portland Beach Road and into Portland Harbour, to divert flood water away from low lying areas.
Rabbits have been associated with bad luck for centuries on Portland; use of the name is still taboo—the creatures are often referred to as "Underground Mutton", "Long-Eared Furry Things" or just "bunnies". The fear of the word is believed to derive from quarry workers; they would see rabbits emerging from their burrows immediately before a rock fall and blame them for increasing the risk of dangerous, sometimes deadly, landslides. There have been cave-ins, and in one instance a crane (machine) operator died when his crane toppled on weak ground above the burrows. If a rabbit was seen in a quarry, the workers would pack up and go home for the day, until the safety of the area had been assured.
Even today older Portland residents are offended or go quiet at the mention of rabbits; this superstition came to national attention in October 2005 when a special batch of
movie poster were made for the Wallace and Gromit film,
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. In respect of local beliefs the adverts omitted the word 'rabbit' and replaced the film's title with the phrase
"Something bunny is going on".
Politics and demographics
Portland is an ancient Royal Manor, and until the 19th century remained a separate Liberty (division) within Dorset for administration. The island was an urban district from 1894 to 1974, until the borough of
Weymouth and Portland formed on
1 April 1974, under the
Local Government Act 1972. This merged the borough of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis and the Portland urban district.
The Mayor of Weymouth and Portland is David Harris (Liberal Democrats), and Tim Munro (
Independent politician#United Kingdom) is Deputy Mayor and Mayor of Portland Town Council. Weymouth, Portland and the
Purbeck (district) district are in the Dorset South
United Kingdom constituencies, created in 1885. The constituency elects one Member of Parliament; the current MP is Jim Knight (
Labour Party (UK)), the Minister of State for Schools.
{]s, giving an approximate population density of 11 residents per hectare. The population is almost entirely native to
England—96.8% of residents are of White British background. House prices on Portland are lower than in Weymouth, but still above the UK average—the average price of a detached house in 2006 was GBP255,921;
semi-detached and
Terraced house houses were cheaper, at £168,995 and £157,403 respectively, and an average apartment or maisonette cost £108,020 in the same year.These figures are for July to September in 2006, and may be affected by a low number of sales.
Crime rates on the island are below that of Weymouth and the United Kingdom—there were 9.1 burglaries per 1000 people in 2005 and 2006; which is higher than
South West England (8.9 per 1000) but lower than
England and Wales (13.5 per 1000). Unemployment levels are low, at 1.8% of the economically active population in 2006, compared to the United Kingdom average of 5.4%.
Geography, geology and ecology
limestone.The Isle of Portland lies in the English Channel, to the south of the resort of Weymouth, forming the southernmost point in
Dorset. Portland situated approximately half-way along the UNESCO
Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site; the site includes of the Dorset and east Devon coast that is important for its geology and
landforms. The
South West Coast Path runs around the island, it is the United Kingdom's longest
Long-distance footpaths in the UK at . Portland is unusual as it is connected to the mainland at Abbotsbury by Chesil Beach, a tombolo which runs north-west to West Bay, Dorset. This feature is often incorrectly defined as a
peninsula or a tombolo—Portland is a 'tied' island, and Chesil Beach is its tombolo.
Geologically, Portland is separated into two areas; the steeply sloping land at the north end of the island called
Underhill, Dorset, and the larger, gently sloping land to the south, called Tophill.
Portland stone lies under Tophill; the strata decline at a shallow angle of around 1.5 degrees, from a height of near
Verne (HM Prison) in the north, to just above sea level at
Portland Bill. The geology of Underhill is different to Tophill; Underhill lies on a steep
escarpment composed of Portland Sand, lying above a thicker layer of Kimmeridge Clay, which extends to Chesil Beach and Portland Harbour. This Kimmeridge Clay has resulted in a series of
landslides, forming West Weares and East Weares.
Portland Stone houses in Fortuneswell, Underhill.There are eight settlements on Portland, the largest being Fortuneswell in Underhill and
Easton, Dorset in Tophill.
Castletown, Dorset and Chiswell are the other villages in Underhill, and
Weston, Dorset, Southwell, Dorset, Wakeham and
the Grove occupy Tophill. Older buildings on the island are built out of
Portland Stone; houses have walls 30–60centimetre (1–2
foot (unit of length)) thick, and a similar layout governed by the culture and living standards at the time they were built. Most houses have not been painted and retain the yellow-grey colour of the stone, giving the island a different character to the mainland.
Portland Bill should not be confused with the Isle of Portland—Portland Bill is a narrow
promontory of
Portland stone which forms the most southerly part of Tophill. The Bill has three
lighthouses; it is an important way-point for ships passing the island and its tidal race. The current lighthouse was refurbished in 1996 and became computer-controlled; a visitor's centre giving information and guided tours of the lighthouse was built nearby. Two earlier lighthouses stand further inland, one is an important observatory used by
ornithology, providing records of bird migration and accommodation for visitors.
Portland Ledge (the Shambles) is an underwater extension of Portland Stone into the English Channel at a place where the depth of Channel is to . Tidal flow is disrupted by the feature, at deep and long it causes a
tidal race to the south of Portland Bill. The current only stops for brief periods during the twelve and half hour tidal cycle and can reach at the spring tide of .
Due to its isolated coastal location, the Isle of Portland has an extensive range of
flora and fauna; the coastline and disused quarries are designated as Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Sea and migratory birds occupy the island in different seasons, sometimes these include rare species which draw
ornithologists from around the country. Rare visitors to the surrounding seas include dolphins, seals and basking sharks. Chesil Beach is one of only two sites in Britain where the Scaly Cricket can be found; unlike any other cricket it is wingless and does not sing or hop.
The comparatively warm and sunny climate of the island allows species of plants to thrive which do not on the mainland. The limestone soil has low
nutrient levels; hence smaller species of wild flowers and grasses are able to grow in the absence of larger species. Portland Sea Lavender can be found on the higher sea cliffs—unique to Portland it is one of the United Kingdom's rarest plants. The wild flowers and plants make an excellent habitat for butterflies; over half of the British Isles' 57 butterfly species can be seen on the island, including varieties that migrate from mainland Europe. Species live on Portland that are rare in the United Kingdom, including the unique Silver Studded Blue.
Climate
The mild seas which surround the island produce a
temperate climate (
Koppen climate classification#GROUP C: Temperate/mesothermal climates Cfb) with a small variation in daily and annual temperatures. The average annual mean temperature from 1971 to 2000 was 10.2 to 12
Celsius. The warmest month is August, with an average temperature range of 13.3 °C to 20.4 °C, and the coolest month is February, with a temperature range of 3.1 °C to 8.3 °C.Maximum and minimum temperatures throughout the year are above the England average, and Portland is in
Hardiness zone#Benefits and criticisms. Areas in
American Horticultural Society Heat zone 2 experience one to seven days per year with maximum temperatures above 30 °C. Mean sea surface temperatures in nearby Weymouth range from 7.0 °C in February to 17.2 °C in August.
The borough of Weymouth and Portland, along with the rest of the South Coast, often has the sunniest weather in Britain. Weymouth and Portland averaged 1768.4 hours of sunshine annually between 1971 and 2000, which is just under 40% of the maximum possible,The maximum hours of sunshine possible in one year is approximately 4476 hours. and 32% above the
Climate of the United Kingdom of 1339.7 hours. December is the cloudiest month, with an average of 55.7 hours of sunshine, and July is the sunniest month, averaging 235.1 hours; sunshine totals in all months are well above the United Kingdom average. The wettest month is December, with an average of 90.9
millimetre of rainfall, and the driest month is July, averaging 35.6 mm. The average annual rainfall of 751.7 mm is well below the United Kingdom average of 1125.0 mm, and monthly rainfall totals throughout the year are less than the UK average. Portland is less affected by the Atlantic storms that
Devon and Cornwall experience.
The mild seas that surround Portland act to keep night-time temperatures above freezing, making winter frost rare: on average eight times a year—this is far below the United Kingdom's average annual total of 55.6 days of frost. Days with snow lying are equally rare: on average zero to six days a year. Almost all winters have one day or less with snow lying; it may snow or
sleet a couple of times in a winter, yet it almost never settles on the ground—coastal areas in the south west such as Portland experience the mildest winters in the UK. The
growing season in Weymouth and Portland lasts from nine to twelve months a year,The growing season in the United Kingdom is defined as starting on the day after five consecutive days with mean temperatures above 5 °C. The season finishes the day after mean temperatures are below 5 °C for five consecutive days. and the borough is in Hardiness zone 9. Areas in Hardiness zone 9 experience an average lowest recorded temperature each year between -1 and -7 °C.
Sport and recreation
, seen from The Verne; the
Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy is on the left.In 2000, the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy was built in Osprey Quay in Underhill as a centre for sailing in the United Kingdom.
Weymouth Bay were credited by the Royal Yachting Association as the best in Northern Europe. Weymouth and Portland regularly host local, national and international sailing events in their waters; these include the J/24 World Championships in 2005, trials for the 2004 Athens Olympics, the ISAF World Championship 2006, the BUSA Fleet Racing Championships, and the RYA Youth National Championships.
In 2005, the WPNSA was selected to host sailing events at the 2012 Summer Olympic Games—mainly because the Academy had recently been built, so no new venue would need to be provided. However, as part of the South West of England Regional Development Agency's plans to redevelop Osprey Quay, a new 600-berth marina and an extension with more on-site facilities will be built. Construction is scheduled between August 2007 and the end of 2008, therefore Weymouth and Portland will be the first in the United Kingdom to finish building a venue for the Olympic Games.
The waters of Weymouth Bay and
Portland Harbour are used for other water sports—the reliable wind is favourable for
windsurfing and
kitesurfing. Chesil beach and Portland Harbour are used regularly for angling, diving to shipwrecks, snorkelling, canoeing, and swimming. The limestone cliffs and quarries are used for rock climbing; Portland has areas for
bouldering and deep water soloing, however sport climbing with bolt protection is the most common style on the island.
In literature
In
The Warlord Chronicles,
Bernard Cornwell suggests that Portland was the Isle of the Dead (mythology), a place of internal exile, where the causeway was guarded to keep the 'dead' (people suffering insanity) from crossing
the Fleet and returning back to the mainland. However, there is no archaeological evidence of such occurrences.
Thomas Hardy called Portland the
Isle of Slingers in his novels; the isle was the main setting of
The Well-Beloved, and was featured in
The Trumpet-Major. Islanders were expert stone-throwers in the defence of their island, and Hardy's
Isle of Slingers is heavily based on Portland; the
Street of Wells representing Fortuneswell and
The Beal as Portland Bill. Hardy named Portland the
Gibraltar of the North, with reference to the island's similarities with Gibraltar; its physical geography, isolation, comparatively mild climate, and Underhill, Dorset's winding streets.
References and notes
External links
- Map sources for grid reference .
- Weymouth & Portland borough council
- History of Portland
- Southampton University's Dorset Geology
- Portland history map
- Portland Sculpture & Quarry Trust
- Portland pictures, history and information
Photographs
- Portland Gallery
- Pictures of England: Portland
- Pictures of Portland Bill
- Portland pictures from the Steps in Time Archive
Further reading
- Stuart Morris, 1985 Portland, an Illustrated History The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 0-946159-34-3
- Stuart Morris, 1998 Portland (Discover Dorset Series) The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 1-874336-49-0.
- Jackson, Brian L. 1999. Isle of Portland railways. ISBN 0853615403
- Palmer, Susann. 1999. Ancient Portland: Archaeology of the Isle. Portland: S. Palmer. ISBN 0953281108
- Stuart Morris, 2002 Portland: A Portrait in Colour The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 1-874336-91-1.
- Stuart Morris, 2006 Portland, Then and Now The Dovecote Press, Wimborne, Dorset: ISBN 1-904349-48-X.
Isle of Portland, Dorset - Geological Field Guide - old version
Ian West's complete, and thoroughly illustrated, guide to the Portland landscape.
Isle of Portland - Geology Field Guide
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Isle of Portland Hotels, Dorset for great seaside holidays. Portland Hotel accommodation, guesthouse, bed and breakfast. Portland Bill Lighthouse, Dorset
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Isle of Portland - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coordinates: 50°33′00″N 2°26′24″W / 50.55, -2.44. The Isle of Portland (pronounced /ˈpɔːtlənd/) is a limestone tied island, 4 miles long by 1.5 miles wide, in ...
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Get-a-map from Ordnance Survey
Window width - Source data - Grid reference at centre -