Description
Swanage's position on the Dorset coast has shaped its history since its earliest years. In 877 a Danish fleet threatening King Alfred's army was destroyed in Swanage Bay and in the nineteenth century the town became a popular seaside resort for the wealthy. Before that, for centuries the town's port had enabled the locally quarried Purbeck stone to be used throughout the country, including the Purbeck marble to be found in Britain's medieval churches and cathedrals. Swanage's history has also been shaped by its famous sons John Mowlem and George Burt, who vastly improved the fortunes of the town during the Victorian era by creating the famous Mowlem quarrying and construction company and also importing many old London buildings and giving them a new lease of life in the town. Swanage's story also includes the Great Globe, Durlston Castle and the Anvil Point Lighthouse, as well as the historic Corfe Castle presiding over the landscape just outside the town, which has been the scene of v