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Brownsea Island is located on the south coast of England and is the largest of the five main islands situated within Poole Harbour. It offers a choice of anchorages which all offer a pleasant natural setting.

Brownsea Island is located on the south coast of England and is the largest of the five main islands situated within Poole Harbour. It offers a choice of anchorages which all offer a pleasant natural setting.

Located deep within England’s most extensive natural harbour the island’s anchorages all offer good protection. Safe access is available in almost all reasonable conditions, and at all states of the tide to its primary anchorage.



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Keyfacts for Brownsea Island
Facilities
Marked or notable walks in the vicinity of this locationPleasant family beach in the areaTourist Information office availableShore based family recreation in the area


Nature
No fees for anchoring or berthing in this locationRemote or quiet secluded locationAnchoring locationVisitors moorings available, or possibly by club arrangementBeach or shoreline landing from a tenderScenic location or scenic location in the immediate vicinityHistoric, geographic or culturally significant location; or in the immediate vicinity

Considerations
None listed

Protected sectors

Current wind over the protected quadrants
Minimum depth
2.5 metres (8.2 feet).

Approaches
5 stars: Safe access; all reasonable conditions.
Shelter
4 stars: Good; assured night's sleep except from specific quarters.



Last modified
July 18th 2018

Summary

A good location with safe access.

Facilities
Marked or notable walks in the vicinity of this locationPleasant family beach in the areaTourist Information office availableShore based family recreation in the area


Nature
No fees for anchoring or berthing in this locationRemote or quiet secluded locationAnchoring locationVisitors moorings available, or possibly by club arrangementBeach or shoreline landing from a tenderScenic location or scenic location in the immediate vicinityHistoric, geographic or culturally significant location; or in the immediate vicinity

Considerations
None listed



Position and approaches
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Haven position

50° 41.604' N, 001° 59.323' W

This is in about two metres off Pottery Pier, situated on the western extremity of Brownsea Island.


What are the key points of the approach?

Offshore details are available in the westbound Route location or eastbound Route location sequenced 'Selsey Bill to Start Point' coastal description. Entry into Poole Harbour and the run up to Poole are covered in the Poole Town Quay Click to view haven entry.

  • Those selecting Pottery Pier anchorage should branch off into the Wych Channel at the large No.18 Port buoy located northeast of Brownsea Island.

  • Those choosing Blood Alley anchorages should make certain there is adequate water before branching off at the No.14 Port buoy located in the entrance off the southeast corner of Brownsea Island.



Not what you need?
Click the 'Next' and 'Previous' buttons to progress through neighbouring havens in a coastal 'clockwise' or 'anti-clockwise' sequence. Below are the ten nearest havens to Brownsea Island for your convenience.
Ten nearest havens by straight line charted distance and bearing:
  1. Goathorn Point - 0.9 nautical miles SSE
  2. Port of Poole Marina - 0.9 nautical miles N
  3. Poole Yacht Club - 0.9 nautical miles NNW
  4. Poole Quay Boat Haven - 1.1 nautical miles N
  5. Poole Town Quay - 1.1 nautical miles N
  6. Shipstal Point - 1.3 nautical miles W
  7. Parkstone Yacht Club - 1.5 nautical miles NE
  8. Salterns Marina - 1.5 nautical miles ENE
  9. Lake Yard Marina - 1.6 nautical miles NW
  10. Cobb's Quay - 1.7 nautical miles NNW
These havens are ordered by straight line charted distance and bearing, and can be reordered by compass direction or coastal sequence:
  1. Goathorn Point - 0.9 miles SSE
  2. Port of Poole Marina - 0.9 miles N
  3. Poole Yacht Club - 0.9 miles NNW
  4. Poole Quay Boat Haven - 1.1 miles N
  5. Poole Town Quay - 1.1 miles N
  6. Shipstal Point - 1.3 miles W
  7. Parkstone Yacht Club - 1.5 miles NE
  8. Salterns Marina - 1.5 miles ENE
  9. Lake Yard Marina - 1.6 miles NW
  10. Cobb's Quay - 1.7 miles NNW
To find locations with the specific attributes you need try:

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Chart
Please use our integrated Navionics chart to appraise the haven and its approaches. Navionics charts feature in premier plotters from B&G, Raymarine, Magellan and are also available on tablets. Open the chart in a larger viewing area by clicking the expand to 'new tab' or the 'full screen' option.

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How to get in?


Brownsea Island lies in the middle of Poole Harbour and is the largest of the extensive harbour's five main islands. The island is predominantly wooded, with an enclosed man-made lagoon on its eastern side, and is 1.25 miles long by 0.6 of a mile wide and consists of 500 acres (202.34 ha). It is today a nature reserve managed by Natural Heritage.

The islands primary anchorage is off Pottery Pier situated at the western extremity of the island. Approaches through Poole Bay and Harbour provide drafts of not less than 6 metres CD up to Port of Poole and the final run up Wych Channel has no less than 2.3 metres.

The approaches to its lesser used southern Blood Alley anchorages has not less than 1.7 metres but quickly descends to 0.3 CD or less around the mouth of the channel.
Please note

Landing is prohibited on the north and east sides of Brownsea Island including the wharf and small dock near the main castle. Dogs are prohibited on Brownsea Island and no barbeques or fires are permitted owing to the high risk of fire.




WYCH CHANNEL
WEST of BROWNSEA ISLAND


Convergance Point Entry into Poole Harbour is covered in the Poole Town Quay Click to view haven entry. Branch off the Middle Ship Channel into the Wych Channel, the third of Poole Harbour’s principal channels, by rounding the large No.18 Port buoy, Fl.R.4s, off the northeast corner of Brownsea Island.





Follow the Wych Channel for 2¼ miles as it passes north of the island and then around its west end. Although the Wych Channel is marked by port and starboard stakes its deeper waters may readily be seen by the density of leisure craft moorings along its length.



The moorings begin to reduce when a permanently anchored old ferry, repurposed as a fish processing raft, is passed off the island’s north most point.




Less than a ¼ of a mile westward of the raft the Wych turns southward where there is an east cardinal beacon, marking Will's Cut, on its northern flank. Will's Cut is a shallow north-south running channel that connects the Wych and Middle Ship channels. A corresponding east cardinal beacon, on the southern side of Middle Ship Channel opposite the Little Channel leading to Poole Town Quay, marks its junction. Will's Cut is clearly signposted, well marked by closely spaced stakes and has a minimum draft of 0.5 metres CD. It offers shoal draft vessels a convenient cut across the harbour.




Continue along the Wych southward through the markings around the west side of the island. Pottery Pier, situated on the western extremity of Brownsea Island, will be visible for the last half mile.




Haven location Anchor according to draft and conditions. Anchor off the channel to the northwest of Brownsea Island clear of moorings and to the east of Wills Cut. Those anchoring in the margins should have little concern if the keel touches as it will sink into the harbour’s soft mud.

Alternatively anchor off Pottery Pier at the western end of the island clear of the oyster beds. Make certain to dig the anchor in well so that the vessel does not lie in a fashion that obstructs the channel. The channel is marked by pairs of unlit port and starboard buoys and is used by harbour tour boats. The harbour’s deep cloying black mud offers excellent holding.
Please note

This can get all over the foredeck when departing so it is advisable to have a bucket of water and brush to hand when weighing anchor.



Salterns Marina Click to view haven and Poole Quay Boat Haven Click to view haven offer mooring berths in the Wych Channel which may be available for short stays.




Land on the shale beaches either side of Pottery Pier. Pottery Pier may no longer be used as it is derelict and unsafe. Alternatively there is a much more pleasant landing on Maryland sandy beach surrounding the old ruins of a jetty 300 metres north-eastward of pottery Pier and due south of Will's Cut.


BLOOD ALLEY and WHITEGROUND LAKES
SOUTH of BROWNSEA ISLAND


Two of the harbours most peaceful anchorages are to be found in Blood Alley Lake and Whiteground Lake off Brownsea Island’s southern shore. Blood Alley Lake carries a minimum draft of 0.3 metres which occasionally dries in patches, providing access to Whiteground Lake.



With careful sounding a vessel drawing up to about 1.5 metres should stay afloat in Blood Alley. But it will not be possible to get in or out of these lakes anywhere near low water. These are the domain of the more adventurous with a shallow draft who are prepared to work the tides during daylight hours. Those who have the time and patience will find these anchorages provide the harbours quietest setting with the most beautiful and unspoiled scenery it has to offer. Both anchorages offer excellent protection in northerly conditions.
Please note

Newcomers venturing into any of Poole Harbour’s lesser channels should make their approaches on a rising tide preparing to leverage the harbour’s moderate rise and tidal curve to the maximum. Be especially careful in the final hour of the rise if the next tidal event is a Neap.



It is possible to pass from the Wych Channel into Whiteground Lake and Blood Alley Lake at high water. A large drying area, drying to 0.5 metres CD at the northwest end of Whiteground Lake and about 400 metres south of Pottery Pier, limits this approach to shoal draft vessels. It is therefore better to enter Blood Alley Lake from the harbour’s entrance and off the southeast corner of the island.




Convergance Point After the No.14 buoy, FI.R.5s, round the lit north cardinal buoy, Q, situated to the north of Stone Island. Then steer to pass the No.1 Green pile beacon, FI.R.5s, to port. This opens up access to Blood Alley Lake and South Deep's Goathorn Point Click to view haven.




An unlit north beacon, that marks the mouth of Blood Alley Lake, will then be seen a little less than 400 metres to the southwest. From this point westward Blood Alley is marked by stakes on either side of the channel.




Blood Alley Lake anchorage can be found a ⅓ of a mile from the entrance marker to the south of the middle of the island. Depths vary between 1.3 and 1.1 metres CD.

Whiteground Lake is situated a ¼ of a mile westward, between Brownsea Island and Furzey Island. It offers slightly deeper water of about 1.7 metres CD.


Why visit here?
Brownsea Island derives its name from having been owned by a man named Brúnoc before the Norman invasion. It was first recorded as Brunkeseye in 1241 meaning ‘the island of Brúnoc’. Since that time it has been variously spelt, Brankesey, Bronksey, Brinksea until it finally became its present Brownsea Island in the 20th century.




Evidence of settlement on the island dates back to the beginning of the 5th-century BC. It is believed that the inhabitants farmed its lands and produced pottery which they traded. The earliest remains of human activity are two remarkable sections of a prehistoric log boat that were discovered in 1964 less than a hundred metres off the Brownsea’s eastern shore. The first piece of the 10-metre-long log boat, made from a single oak log, was accidentally uncovered during dredging work and the remaining section was then found by divers a month later. Radiocarbon dated the log boat to 397 – 176 BC, and it comprised what was a sophisticated design for its time of a slot fitted transom and well-shaped bow.




The Romans settled in small communities around Poole Harbour and evidence of a submerged Roman settlement, including pieces of wooden furniture, have also been found on the eastern side of the island. It is to be expected that other submerged Roman sites and features also exist within the Harbour. Viking raiding parties attacked the area in the 9th-century until King Alfred's naval fleet drove them away in 876 and he then won his decisive Battle of Edington which secured a final successful peace treaty. With the Danish appearing to be expelled, the first records of a modest inhabitation of Brownsea Island appear.

A small chapel and hermitage was built here by monks from Cerne Abbey near Dorchester. The church would have had a hermit who would have most likely administered spiritual welfare to the seamen who landed there. The earliest description of the island comes from this time ‘There ly three isles in the haven of Pool, whereof the most famous is Brunkeshey. Sum say that there has been a paroch in it. There is yet a chapel for an heremite. It longith to Cerne abbey. The chapel was dedicated to St. Andrew, of which it and the hermitage there are no remains. ’ The little church gave St. Andrew's Bay, now the lagoon enclosed by dams on the island’s northeastern shore, its name.




In 1015, Canute led a Viking raid into the harbour and used Brownsea as a safe point to retreat and regroup from the Frome after attacking Wareham and Cerne Abbey. St. Ethelwold noted ‘Canutus, having spoiled the church and monastery of Cerne, took to the haven, and sailed thence to Branksey which is two miles from Poole, having on it no buildings, save a chapel only.’ Canute then destroyed the chapel. Within a couple of years Canute would be king of England.

Brúnoc, who lent the island its name, owned the island at the time of the Norman invasion. William the Conqueror gave Studland, which included Brownsea, to his half-brother Robert de Mortain. There is no mention of Brownsea Island in the 1086 Domesday Book. It is believed that it was included in the survey of de Mortain’s Studland estate, with some of the twenty-two salterns said to be in that parish, being on the shores of this island.

In 1154, King Henry II granted the Abbot of Cerne the island and the ‘right of wreck’ along its shoreline. The Abbey continued to control the interests of Brownsea for the next 350 years and the monks fiercely guarded their right to keep all shipwrecks, flotsam and jetsam that came up on it.
Pirates terrorised the locals in the 15th century enjoying nothing better than raiding the Kings cellars on Pool Quay which held their contraband of brandy and tobacco. The legendary Poole privateer Harry Paye, who gave his name to the ‘Old Harry Rocks’ and who is also celebrated locally by the annual ‘Harry Paye day’, sailed from here to loot and torch the towns of Spain and France. Harry caused such mayhem that he provoked a French invasion in an attempt to kill him. One battle with Poole’s customs officers resulted in the lake south of the island running red with blood and it remains known to this day as ‘Blood Alley Lake’.




After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the seizure of ecclesiastical property brought Brownsea to the Crown. Henry VIII recognised the island's strategic importance of guarding the narrow entrance to the expanding port of Poole. As part of his deterrent to invasion forces from Europe, he built a fortified simple artillery fort at the south-eastern extremity of the island. In 1547 this was replaced with a blockhouse which became known as Brownsea Castle, though originally Branksea Castle.


Queen Elizabeth I subsequently granted Brownsea Island to Christopher Hatton, along with Corfe Castle. He promoted Sir Francis Drake's voyage round the world and later became Lord Chancellor. Piracy continued to be rife in the area at this time and captains of the castle were reputed to give protection to some of the area's leading pirates in return for a share of their booty. In the civil wars, Brownsea Castle, in connection with the town of Poole, was garrisoned for the parliament.

From the 1720s until the 1960s when it was donated to the nation, Brownsea Island became a mini-kingdom for a succession of rich men. During this time Brownsea Castle functioned as a country house at the centre of an estate. Each owner bent Brownsea to their will, embellishing their private kingdom by landscaping the grounds and gradually adding associated structures to the castle. The island saw its largest development during Victorian times and especially so under the custodianship of William Waugh, a former Colonel in the British Army, who made the mistake of trying to get richer by investing in the island.

After walking through the Island, with his wife Mary, Waugh noticed some white mud stuck to his wife’s walking stick. The production of low quality brick and tiles had taken place on the island since the earliest days of the 17th century. But Waugh believed that the white mud indicated that the island had precious white clays that could make high quality porcelain. He immediately bought the island in 1852 and stated to invest lavishly.

A three-storey pottery factory was established on the south shore together with a tramway to transport the clays from clay pits in the north. The Branksea Clay & Pottery Company expanded to employ more than 200 people, many of whom rowed over from Studland every day. The Colonel constructed a model village to house workers on the island, called Maryland after his wife, and also the elaborate neo-Gothic church of St. Mary the Virgin for services. Soon more than 117 people lived at Maryland and the children would go to a school on the east end of the island. Waugh constructed a new pier, adorned Brownsea Castle with castellated watch towers and also added a new gatehouse and tower to the castle. He then built a sea wall to reclaim St. Andrew's Bay for pasture lands.

Sadly, his wished for white clays never materialised and his factory only produced the pipes and terracotta chimney pots that the islands poor clays were suitable for. These were not profitable enough to finance Waugh’s spending and after five years he and his wife fled to Spain bankrupt leaving the island and its assets to be acquired by his creditors in 1873. The 1881 census recorded a total population of 270 people on the island, the majority of residents providing a labour force for the pottery works. But the factory finally closed in 1887 due to the poor quality of the clay and lack of demand for its produce. Many of the pottery factory workers stayed on after it closed, farming and working the estates of the next series of gentleman owners.


At the turn of the century the island was bought by Charles van Raalte who brought about a period of unparalleled prosperity and grandeur. The family's steam launch, the Blunderbuss, brought over wealthy and titled guests from various European royal families. They would enjoy elegant summer house-parties, a new golf course, and shoot game in the woods. Included in the visitors was Marconi who gave a wireless set to the van Raalte's children.


In 1907 van Raalte hosted the first trial of a Scout camp. This was led by Lord Baden-Powell to test his ideas for his book ‘Scouting for Boys’. He had drawn on sons of friends and the local Boy's Brigade for this first camp on the island. The success of this camp gave birth to the Boy Scout movement and Boy Scouts continued to camp on the island up until the early 1930s.


In 1927 the island was purchased at auction by Mary Bonham-Christie. A recluse by nature, she ordered a mass eviction of the island's residents to the mainland. Opposed to blood sports and any other exploitation of animals she banned hunting and fishing and let the island revert to nature. In 1934, a wild fire caused devastation after burning for a week from west to east. Much of the island was reduced to ashes, and the buildings to the east were only saved by a change of wind direction. Traumatised by the event, Bonham-Christie banned all public access to the island for the rest of her life.


In the 1940s, like other sites in Purbeck, at the western end of the island a ‘starfish’ mock-up of Poole was created by the staff of Elstree film studios with wires and cordite. This was lit to mislead the Luftwaffe navigators into dropping their loads on the island and spare the port of Poole. This decoy saved Poole and Bournemouth from 1,000 tonnes of German bombs in 1942. The deserted village of Maryland took the weight of the bombing and was so severely damaged that it was eventually levelled in the 1960s. Bonham-Christie died in 1961, aged 98, and passed the island on to her grandson. He passed it to the Crown to pay her death duties who in turn handed it to the National Trust. Through the management of the National Trust the Island opened to the public once again in 1963.




Today Brownsea Island has a community of about thirty people who live on the island but it attracts more than 100,000 visitors annually. No effort is made to increase this number in order to avoid damage to the Island. The castle and many of its associated buildings are all Grade II Listed Buildings and, like the rest of the island, form part of the National Trust estate with a small part of the island being leased to the Dorset Wildlife Trust. It has a visitor centre and museum, displaying the island's history. There is also a shop and cafe, with one holiday cottage on the quay. The extraordinarily rare log boat found close by has been on display since 2007 at the Poole Museum.



Beyond the castle is the 500-acre island of pinewood, heathland and salt-marsh that provides a unique habitat for wildlife. The island’s red squirrels are one of the few colonies left in England. The Scout camp, at the south side of the Island, has an outdoor centre and a trading post shop. A stone marks the location of Lord Baden-Powell's first campsite. Part of the church is dedicated to the Scouting movement and the flags of the Scout and Girl Guide movements line either side of the main altar. Brownsea is still celebrated and memorialised as the birthplace of the Scout Movement.


Brownsea Island’s anchorages offer perfect security and an ideal central location from which to explore the harbour’s hidden recesses by dinghy. Exploring this magical island’s woodland, heathland and coastal walks will most likely be the highlight of any visit to Poole Harbour. It is truly a wonderful place upon which to land, take some time to explore and enjoy its peaceful aura. There is plenty for children to explore including a tree climbing trail and a natural play area. Dogs are however prohibited due to the island’s rare population of red squirrels.




What facilities are available?
Toilets are located at visitor reception at the visitor centre of the Baden-Powell Outdoor Centre.
Food is available in the Villano Café. There are free guided walks, twice daily, 11.30am and 2pm.


With thanks to:
John Binder CMM Poole Quay Boat Haven & Port of Poole Marina manager. Photography with thanks to LordHarris, Peter Trimming, Hideyuki KAMON and Michael Harpur.



































Brownsea Island slide show


About Brownsea Island

Brownsea Island derives its name from having been owned by a man named Brúnoc before the Norman invasion. It was first recorded as Brunkeseye in 1241 meaning ‘the island of Brúnoc’. Since that time it has been variously spelt, Brankesey, Bronksey, Brinksea until it finally became its present Brownsea Island in the 20th century.




Evidence of settlement on the island dates back to the beginning of the 5th-century BC. It is believed that the inhabitants farmed its lands and produced pottery which they traded. The earliest remains of human activity are two remarkable sections of a prehistoric log boat that were discovered in 1964 less than a hundred metres off the Brownsea’s eastern shore. The first piece of the 10-metre-long log boat, made from a single oak log, was accidentally uncovered during dredging work and the remaining section was then found by divers a month later. Radiocarbon dated the log boat to 397 – 176 BC, and it comprised what was a sophisticated design for its time of a slot fitted transom and well-shaped bow.




The Romans settled in small communities around Poole Harbour and evidence of a submerged Roman settlement, including pieces of wooden furniture, have also been found on the eastern side of the island. It is to be expected that other submerged Roman sites and features also exist within the Harbour. Viking raiding parties attacked the area in the 9th-century until King Alfred's naval fleet drove them away in 876 and he then won his decisive Battle of Edington which secured a final successful peace treaty. With the Danish appearing to be expelled, the first records of a modest inhabitation of Brownsea Island appear.

A small chapel and hermitage was built here by monks from Cerne Abbey near Dorchester. The church would have had a hermit who would have most likely administered spiritual welfare to the seamen who landed there. The earliest description of the island comes from this time ‘There ly three isles in the haven of Pool, whereof the most famous is Brunkeshey. Sum say that there has been a paroch in it. There is yet a chapel for an heremite. It longith to Cerne abbey. The chapel was dedicated to St. Andrew, of which it and the hermitage there are no remains. ’ The little church gave St. Andrew's Bay, now the lagoon enclosed by dams on the island’s northeastern shore, its name.




In 1015, Canute led a Viking raid into the harbour and used Brownsea as a safe point to retreat and regroup from the Frome after attacking Wareham and Cerne Abbey. St. Ethelwold noted ‘Canutus, having spoiled the church and monastery of Cerne, took to the haven, and sailed thence to Branksey which is two miles from Poole, having on it no buildings, save a chapel only.’ Canute then destroyed the chapel. Within a couple of years Canute would be king of England.

Brúnoc, who lent the island its name, owned the island at the time of the Norman invasion. William the Conqueror gave Studland, which included Brownsea, to his half-brother Robert de Mortain. There is no mention of Brownsea Island in the 1086 Domesday Book. It is believed that it was included in the survey of de Mortain’s Studland estate, with some of the twenty-two salterns said to be in that parish, being on the shores of this island.

In 1154, King Henry II granted the Abbot of Cerne the island and the ‘right of wreck’ along its shoreline. The Abbey continued to control the interests of Brownsea for the next 350 years and the monks fiercely guarded their right to keep all shipwrecks, flotsam and jetsam that came up on it.
Pirates terrorised the locals in the 15th century enjoying nothing better than raiding the Kings cellars on Pool Quay which held their contraband of brandy and tobacco. The legendary Poole privateer Harry Paye, who gave his name to the ‘Old Harry Rocks’ and who is also celebrated locally by the annual ‘Harry Paye day’, sailed from here to loot and torch the towns of Spain and France. Harry caused such mayhem that he provoked a French invasion in an attempt to kill him. One battle with Poole’s customs officers resulted in the lake south of the island running red with blood and it remains known to this day as ‘Blood Alley Lake’.




After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the seizure of ecclesiastical property brought Brownsea to the Crown. Henry VIII recognised the island's strategic importance of guarding the narrow entrance to the expanding port of Poole. As part of his deterrent to invasion forces from Europe, he built a fortified simple artillery fort at the south-eastern extremity of the island. In 1547 this was replaced with a blockhouse which became known as Brownsea Castle, though originally Branksea Castle.


Queen Elizabeth I subsequently granted Brownsea Island to Christopher Hatton, along with Corfe Castle. He promoted Sir Francis Drake's voyage round the world and later became Lord Chancellor. Piracy continued to be rife in the area at this time and captains of the castle were reputed to give protection to some of the area's leading pirates in return for a share of their booty. In the civil wars, Brownsea Castle, in connection with the town of Poole, was garrisoned for the parliament.

From the 1720s until the 1960s when it was donated to the nation, Brownsea Island became a mini-kingdom for a succession of rich men. During this time Brownsea Castle functioned as a country house at the centre of an estate. Each owner bent Brownsea to their will, embellishing their private kingdom by landscaping the grounds and gradually adding associated structures to the castle. The island saw its largest development during Victorian times and especially so under the custodianship of William Waugh, a former Colonel in the British Army, who made the mistake of trying to get richer by investing in the island.

After walking through the Island, with his wife Mary, Waugh noticed some white mud stuck to his wife’s walking stick. The production of low quality brick and tiles had taken place on the island since the earliest days of the 17th century. But Waugh believed that the white mud indicated that the island had precious white clays that could make high quality porcelain. He immediately bought the island in 1852 and stated to invest lavishly.

A three-storey pottery factory was established on the south shore together with a tramway to transport the clays from clay pits in the north. The Branksea Clay & Pottery Company expanded to employ more than 200 people, many of whom rowed over from Studland every day. The Colonel constructed a model village to house workers on the island, called Maryland after his wife, and also the elaborate neo-Gothic church of St. Mary the Virgin for services. Soon more than 117 people lived at Maryland and the children would go to a school on the east end of the island. Waugh constructed a new pier, adorned Brownsea Castle with castellated watch towers and also added a new gatehouse and tower to the castle. He then built a sea wall to reclaim St. Andrew's Bay for pasture lands.

Sadly, his wished for white clays never materialised and his factory only produced the pipes and terracotta chimney pots that the islands poor clays were suitable for. These were not profitable enough to finance Waugh’s spending and after five years he and his wife fled to Spain bankrupt leaving the island and its assets to be acquired by his creditors in 1873. The 1881 census recorded a total population of 270 people on the island, the majority of residents providing a labour force for the pottery works. But the factory finally closed in 1887 due to the poor quality of the clay and lack of demand for its produce. Many of the pottery factory workers stayed on after it closed, farming and working the estates of the next series of gentleman owners.


At the turn of the century the island was bought by Charles van Raalte who brought about a period of unparalleled prosperity and grandeur. The family's steam launch, the Blunderbuss, brought over wealthy and titled guests from various European royal families. They would enjoy elegant summer house-parties, a new golf course, and shoot game in the woods. Included in the visitors was Marconi who gave a wireless set to the van Raalte's children.


In 1907 van Raalte hosted the first trial of a Scout camp. This was led by Lord Baden-Powell to test his ideas for his book ‘Scouting for Boys’. He had drawn on sons of friends and the local Boy's Brigade for this first camp on the island. The success of this camp gave birth to the Boy Scout movement and Boy Scouts continued to camp on the island up until the early 1930s.


In 1927 the island was purchased at auction by Mary Bonham-Christie. A recluse by nature, she ordered a mass eviction of the island's residents to the mainland. Opposed to blood sports and any other exploitation of animals she banned hunting and fishing and let the island revert to nature. In 1934, a wild fire caused devastation after burning for a week from west to east. Much of the island was reduced to ashes, and the buildings to the east were only saved by a change of wind direction. Traumatised by the event, Bonham-Christie banned all public access to the island for the rest of her life.


In the 1940s, like other sites in Purbeck, at the western end of the island a ‘starfish’ mock-up of Poole was created by the staff of Elstree film studios with wires and cordite. This was lit to mislead the Luftwaffe navigators into dropping their loads on the island and spare the port of Poole. This decoy saved Poole and Bournemouth from 1,000 tonnes of German bombs in 1942. The deserted village of Maryland took the weight of the bombing and was so severely damaged that it was eventually levelled in the 1960s. Bonham-Christie died in 1961, aged 98, and passed the island on to her grandson. He passed it to the Crown to pay her death duties who in turn handed it to the National Trust. Through the management of the National Trust the Island opened to the public once again in 1963.




Today Brownsea Island has a community of about thirty people who live on the island but it attracts more than 100,000 visitors annually. No effort is made to increase this number in order to avoid damage to the Island. The castle and many of its associated buildings are all Grade II Listed Buildings and, like the rest of the island, form part of the National Trust estate with a small part of the island being leased to the Dorset Wildlife Trust. It has a visitor centre and museum, displaying the island's history. There is also a shop and cafe, with one holiday cottage on the quay. The extraordinarily rare log boat found close by has been on display since 2007 at the Poole Museum.



Beyond the castle is the 500-acre island of pinewood, heathland and salt-marsh that provides a unique habitat for wildlife. The island’s red squirrels are one of the few colonies left in England. The Scout camp, at the south side of the Island, has an outdoor centre and a trading post shop. A stone marks the location of Lord Baden-Powell's first campsite. Part of the church is dedicated to the Scouting movement and the flags of the Scout and Girl Guide movements line either side of the main altar. Brownsea is still celebrated and memorialised as the birthplace of the Scout Movement.


Brownsea Island’s anchorages offer perfect security and an ideal central location from which to explore the harbour’s hidden recesses by dinghy. Exploring this magical island’s woodland, heathland and coastal walks will most likely be the highlight of any visit to Poole Harbour. It is truly a wonderful place upon which to land, take some time to explore and enjoy its peaceful aura. There is plenty for children to explore including a tree climbing trail and a natural play area. Dogs are however prohibited due to the island’s rare population of red squirrels.



Other options in this area


Click the 'Next' and 'Previous' buttons to progress through neighbouring havens in a coastal 'clockwise' or 'anti-clockwise' sequence. Alternatively here are the ten nearest havens available in picture view:
Coastal clockwise:
Goathorn Point - 0.5 miles SSE
Studland Bay - 2.2 miles SE
Swanage - 3.3 miles SSE
Chapman's Pool - 4.2 miles SSW
Worbarrow Bay - 6.2 miles WSW
Coastal anti-clockwise:
Shipstal Point - 0.8 miles W
Ridge Wharf Yacht Centre - 2.4 miles W
Redclyffe Yacht Club - 2.7 miles W
Wareham - 2.9 miles W
Lake Yard Marina - 1 miles NW

Navigational pictures


These additional images feature in the 'How to get in' section of our detailed view for Brownsea Island.



















































Brownsea Island slide show



A photograph is worth a thousand words. We are always looking for bright sunny photographs that show this haven and its identifiable features at its best. If you have some images that we could use please upload them here. All we need to know is how you would like to be credited for your work and a brief description of the image if it is not readily apparent. If you would like us to add a hyperlink from the image that goes back to your site please include the desired link and we will be delighted to that for you.


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Please note eOceanic makes no guarantee of the validity of this information, we have not visited this haven and do not have first-hand experience to qualify the data. Although the contributors are vetted by peer review as practised authorities, they are in no way, whatsoever, responsible for the accuracy of their contributions. It is essential that you thoroughly check the accuracy and suitability for your vessel of any waypoints offered in any context plus the precision of your GPS. Any data provided on this page is entirely used at your own risk and you must read our legal page if you view data on this site. Free to use sea charts courtesy of Navionics.