Where do the Weld family live?

south Dorset
The Weld Family The Lulworth Estate extends over 12,000 acres (20 square miles) of the south Dorset countryside, including 5 miles of the Jurassic Coast and internationally renowned landmarks such as Lulworth Cove and Durdle Door.

Who owns Lulworth?

the Weld family
History & Heritage Lulworth’s estate pedigree can go back as far as Doomsday times in the 11th century and beyond, and, since 1641, it has been owned and managed by the Weld family.

Who is James Weld?

James Weld with the Jurassic Coast. James Weld DL is a Chartered Surveyor, Deputy Lieutenant of Dorset and landowner, managing the 12,000 acre Lulworth Estate on behalf of the Weld family, which owns 5 miles of the Jurassic Coast including Lulworth Cove and Durdle Door.

Is Lulworth Castle a ruin?

The castle was gutted by fire on 29 August 1929 and was left as a roofless ruin, the family building a new residence for themselves nearby. The castle is still owned by the Weld family and is a tourist attraction, holding medieval-themed events.

Does anyone live in Lulworth Castle?

The 12,000 acre estate is predominantly owned by the Weld family, who have lived there for several generations.

What created Lulworth Cove?

Lulworth Cove in Dorset is a stunning, scallop-shaped cove which was formed approximately 10,000 years ago by the power of water. The landscape around the cove is constantly changing – it continues to evolve behind a narrow Portland Stone entrance whilst the softer chalk exposures are eroded.

Who demolished Corfe Castle?

The 22-year-old used computer animation technology to digitally rebuild the castle that was destroyed by Oliver Cromwell’s Parliamentarian army in the English Civil War.

Is Lulworth Castle lived in?

Lulworth Castle, in East Lulworth, Dorset, England, situated south of the village of Wool, is an early 17th-century hunting lodge erected in the style of a revival fortified castle, one of only five extant Elizabethan or Jacobean buildings of this type….

Lulworth Castle
Reference no.1016069

When did Lulworth Castle burn down?

29 August 1929
The castle was gutted by fire on 29 August 1929 and was left as a roofless ruin, the family building a new residence for themselves nearby. In the 1970s, restoration work began with the help of English Heritage.

What is the postcode for Lulworth Cove?

BH20 5RQ
Lulworth Cove (pay and display) (Postcode for Sat Navs: BH20 5RQ).

Is Lulworth Cove a headland?

The bands of soft rock erode more quickly than those of the more resistant hard rock leaving a section of land jutting out into the sea, called a headland. The alternating bands of hard and soft rock run parallel to the coast. Lulworth Cove is situated on the south coast of England, on a concordant coastline.

What rock is Lulworth Cove?

limestones
Lulworth Cove is well known for its scenery, rocks and fossils. The rocks in the foreground are thin limestones, formed in warm coastal lagoons & swamps about 135 million years ago (Jurassic Period).

Who was Wilfrid Weld and what did he do?

Wilfrid Weld, who has died aged 81, was the owner of the Lulworth Estate in Dorset and the head of a notable Roman Catholic family. The estate comprises 20 square miles of rural Dorset and contains dozens of listed buildings, including Lulworth Castle,…

Who owns Lulworth Castle?

The estate comprises 20 square miles of rural Dorset and contains dozens of listed buildings, including Lulworth Castle, built between 1606 and 1610 as a hunting lodge, which has been owned by the Weld family since Humphrey Weld, a prominent Royalist and former cup-bearer to Queen Henrietta Maria, bought the estate in 1641.

What happened to Lord Weld’s Castle?

By the time Wilfrid Weld inherited the estate on his father Joseph’s death in 1992, however, the castle had stood as a ruin following a disastrous fire in 1929, which had completely gutted the interior. Joseph Weld had become the first Catholic Lord Lieutenant of Dorset and was knighted in 1973.

Who was Lord Lieutenant Joseph Weld?

Joseph Weld had become the first Catholic Lord Lieutenant of Dorset and was knighted in 1973. It was during his tenure that a branch of the Weld family that held land in Lancashire died out and its assets reverted to Lulworth.

You Might Also Like