I recently came across details of a film which was set in Lyme Regis in 1949. All Over the Town is a comedy film directed by Derek N. Twist and starring Norman Wooland, Sarah Churchill and Cyril Cusack, based on a novel by R.F. Delderfield.
After serving in the RAF during the Second World War, Nat returns to his prewar job as a reporter on the Tormouth Clarion which is in Lyme Regis. He is now working alongside Sally, who had taken his job when he enlisted. Later, Nat becomes the owner of the paper, but his employees strike, disagreeing with Nat’s stance on Tormouth’s housing scheme.
The only known surviving copy of the film was the negative at the BFI National Film and Television Archive. In 2005, the Lyme Regis Film Society commissioned the production of a new print from the negative. This copy of the film is housed in Lyme Regis Museum and has been shown at the local Regent Cinema on a few occasions. In 2018, it was shown on the UK television channel Talking Pictures TV.
You can see how Lyme Regis looked in the 40’s and still see some of the buildings and views. If you are staying at the Blacksmiths Cottage you can watch the film on the Apple TV by using AirPlay sharing.
The Uplyme Fete takes place on Saturday, June 8th this year at 2.00 pm and it will build on the success of last year with all the favourite and some new attractions. The popular free train rides will also return with the bouncy castle and roundabout. A Punch and Judy show and music tent make a return and also an exhibition of classic cars to explore and chat with the owners about. A huge range of drinks and food will be served along with the popular cream teas in the Village Hall and even a classical guitarist.
If you are staying at The Blacksmith’s Cottage, Uplyme, go along. Not only will you get to experience village life, the locals are very welcoming, but you will also have a lovely day.
Between 11 am to 5 pm the streets of Lyme Regis will be alive with the sound of music from musicians and street artists, including local people. No matter what your level of music ability, everyone is welcome to have a go; play on the piano, try out the drums, join the open mic session, or come and busk!
The ‘Play Me Piano’ and the open mic will be set up at the Jubilee Pavilion on Marine Parade between 11 am and 5 pm and the ‘Play Me Drums’ will be available to try out by the beach huts on the seafront between 2 pm and 4 pm.
There will also be a Pop Up Choir between 2 pm and 4 pm in the Lister Room above the Marine Parade shelters and a ukulele workshop with the Lyme Luggers between 1 pm and 2 pm in the shelters.
Also in the seafront shelters, the festival will offer a family workshop making instruments from recycled materials between 2 pm and 4 pm with Plastic Free Lyme Regis.
For more information about the Busking Festival or to find out more about B Sharp’s music-making programmes for young musicians, visit bsharp.org.uk
The Courtyard Cafe offers a fusion of flavours from world travel, nutrition and years of good experience. They offer a warm and friendly welcome and intend to make your visit comfortable and enjoyable.
Go and visit them for a variety of cooked breakfasts, morning leaf teas and fresh coffee, delicious homemade cakes, wholesome lunches and afternoon teas in the delightful 12th-century cobblestone courtyard at the Town Mill in Lyme Regis.
They source the produce as locally as possible, recycle 80% of their waste, use the flour from The Town Mill to make Bread, Cakes, Pastries and Scones. Everything on the menu is cooked from fresh ingredients from scratch and is totally authentic. They also served the biggest slice of vegan chocolate cake we have seen.
They are very happy to accept well-behaved dogs in the cafe and courtyard areas, but please be mindful of other customers who do not have the same affinity for canines! The outside eating area is a no smoking zone!
It’s small so book or come early to avoid disappointment, off the beaten track but worth finding.
SPECIAL DIETS
Vegetarian Friendly, Vegan Options, Gluten Free Options
Uplyme will soon have a night landing site for the air ambulance service.
Devon Air Ambulance is currently working with Uplyme to develop a floodlit community landing site at King George V playing field, which will enable it to carry out its life-saving service after dark. Floodlighting is an essential component of a community landing site, for both safety and practical reasons – it illuminates the site during landing and take-off and helps paramedics when loading a patient into the aircraft and during transfer between land and air ambulance.
Funds donated included £2,000 from Lyme Regis Regatta & Carnival Committee – the single biggest donation the group has ever given away – as well as £270 from Uplyme Pre-School and a generous donation from local resident Vivienne Graham, raised through a collection in memory of her late husband Malcolm. Uplyme and Lyme Regis Horticultural Society and Devon County Council have also helped with funding.
Devon Air Ambulance has two helicopters, meaning it can reach 90 per cent of the county’s population within 10 minutes, and they are now flying until 2 am with hopes of creating a 24-hour service in the future.
The lights will not be on all the time but will be switched on by the air ambulance team via mobile phone technology as and when needed.
If you are walking down Broad Street or coming back from the beach and feeling in need of a drink, a great place to visit is Cellar 59. A hidden gem, this is not a brewery chain or a place for loud music and food that’s been messed around with, but just great beer in an amazing space.
Go down the steps into the cellar under the solicitor and surveyors and just up from the Royal Lion. Here you will find more locals than tourists at the bar and 13 plus beers on tap as well as cider and wines. I recommend the ‘flight of thirds’ where you can try 3 ‘third of a pint’ glasses of your choice. My family think it’s a dangerous place! They have a bookshelf if you plan on a long visit and board games, Chess and cards & draughts available to play on the tables.
There are four hand pumps to pour cask ale and ten keg taps delivering beer directly from the Keg Shed. The beer is sourced from breweries that do not use finings (isinglass), or from those who are brave enough to give it a try and break from the tradition of using fish products in their beer, a lucky additional bonus this approach makes the beer suitable for vegans and vegetarians. Gluten intolerant people will be delighted to find that they can often offer at least 5 different gluten-free beers.
The bottle shop contains bottles and cans and 9-pint kegs so if you are planning on staying in then you can enjoy some great beer.
57/58 Broad Street Lyme Regis, Dorset DT7 3QF
Tel: 01297 445086
Summer Hours (from 1st April)
Monday – Closed (except – see below)
Mon Bank Holidays – 12pm to 10pm
Tuesday to Thursday – 4.00pm to 10.00pm
Friday & Saturday – 12.00pm to 11.00pm
Sunday – 12.00pm to 8.30pm
The Lyme Regis branch line connected Lyme Regis with the mainline railway at Axminster, running through picturesque rural countryside on the Dorset – Devon border.
It opened in 1903 and on summer weekends it was very busy with high passenger numbers with through carriages from London on many services. The line achieved high levels of interest among railway enthusiasts in later years because a veteran type of steam engine, the Adams ‘Radial’ Tank 4-4-2T locomotive; this engine class survived long after the type had been superseded in its original area of use in the London suburbs.
The line was 6 miles long, starting from Axminster station, at the level of the River Axe there, it climbed, running broadly southerly to Combpyne, where the only intermediate station was sited. Turning broadly east, it descended to Lyme Regis, crossing an arm of the River Lim on Cannington Viaduct, a short walk from the Blacksmith’s Cottage and passing through Uplyme through what is now Barnes Meadow.
Cannington Viaduct is a Grade II listed structure and is the only significant structure on the branch, 203 yards long with ten elliptical arches of 50 feet span, 92 feet high. It was constructed of mass concrete with pre-cast concrete voussoirs; it was one of the earliest major structures of the type in England, and the second highest of the type. Cement was brought to the Cobb harbour at Lyme Regis, and to the construction site by a 1,000 foot cableway. Crushed flint from locally excavated material was used for the aggregate.
During its construction the west abutment and the adjacent pier slipped during the process of tipping fill material behind it, and it and the first pier settled significantly, distorting the first arch, delaying the opening. The displaced foundations were stabilised and the third arch was strengthened with a wall the distorted first arch was given a brick arch ring. You can still see these.
The gradient was too steep to permit a station in Uplyme. The station at Lyme Regis was on the north of the town at what is now the Health Centre and Jewsons, because immediately beyond t the land falls steeply towards the town.
Passenger use declined in the years following the Second World War, and only summer weekends remained busy. The line was scheduled for closure, and this was implemented on 29 November 1965.
The main station building at Lyme Regis was wooden, and after closure it was dismantled and re-erected at Alresford station, on the Watercress Line in Hampshire. The imposing Cannington Viaduct is a Grade II listed structure.
There is a proposal to build a narrow gauge line between Axminster and a park and ride on the coastal road to Seaton, part of which would use part of the trackbed of the former Lyme Regis branch.
Unlike some of the closed lines, the land along much of it has now become farmland and even part of peoples gardens, which means it will never be reestablished as a walking or cycling route. There are a number of choices of walks around the Cannington Viaduct from the Blacksmith’s Cottage including quiet lanes and footpaths. In the winter it may be best to limit the footpaths and this route suggestion includes just two fields to cross.
Visiting a Bluebell Wood is one of the UK’s great seasonal highlights, Prescott Pinetum Uplyme is a must visit this spring.
Walk back up Venlake Lane and cross Cannington Lane into Woodhouse Lane. Head up the hill from the cross roads and after about 300m you’ll see a footpath marker on your right in Woodhouse Fields.
There is a sign almost immediately opposite it on the left for the Woodland Trust. The road then turns into a footpath that heads up in to the woods.
The Prescott Pinetum, (also known as either Uplyme or Woodhouse Pinetum), sits on a north-east facing slope, and is visible from Uplyme. Hosting a variety of majestic oak, beech and conifer species, overlooking Lyme Regis and the Jurassic Coast, the Pinetum is thought to have been established between 1840 and 1860s, and features giant Wellingtonia’s, Grand fir, Noble Fir, Blue Atlas Cedar, Japanese Red Cedar, Prince Albert’s Yew and Coast Redwoods. Many of the conifers that remain are now magnificent specimen trees, including one UK champion. This site’s diversity of species has earned it a Tree Preservation Order. A single path meanders through the woodland. Look out for the remains of a woodman’s cottage.
Follow the path and then turn right to follow the path back on yourself and down to the lane again. Turn left and follow Dipper Trail out onto the road and then turn left again. The road climbs and at the junction turn left again and follow Seaview Road through the woods again. At the end of the road turn right and back down the Woodhouse Lane and home.
Lot’s of people joined the New Year’s Day traditional Duck Race along the River Lim to the start of the duck race just before 12noon and couldn’t quite believe the hoards of people heading in the same direction. It was one of the biggest crowd ever seen for a duck race and, walking down to the seafront afterwards for the annual Lyme Lunge after they watched the ducks race down the River Lym, raising money for Lyme’s Christmas Lights.
Enjoy shopping in Broad Street, Lyme Regis amid the spirit of a traditional family Christmas in our wonderful little town. There’s a host of festive events and happenings taking place in the lead up to Christmas, so why not wrap up warm, bring the family along and enjoy one of our great Yuletime celebrations?
Come early for the Lantern Parade and enjoy the atmosphere, join in the switching on of the Christmas Lights countdown – don’t be late or you’ll miss it!
3.00pm Lantern Workshop in Lyme Regis Baptist Church Pine Hall Children and adults welcome to come along and join in the fun and make a lantern
4.30pm Judging of the Lantern Competition in Lyme Regis Baptist Church
5.15pm Parade from the Baptist Church with lanterns, the Majorettes and Father Christmas down through Broad Street to the Christmas tree
5.30pm Switch on of the Christmas lights by the Mayor, Cllr Michaela Ellis