GROYNES, CLIFF END 1977
Fay Godwin (1931 – 2005)
Details
- Dimension
- 28 X 28 CM
- Media
- SILVER PRINT
- Accession number
- P4315
Summary
This work comes from the book Romney Marsh and the Royal Military Canal, first published in 1980 by Wildwood House Ltd, with text by Richard Ingrams. Romney Marsh is situated in the South East corner of England and is an area of low meadows, sea-walls, ditches, sheep and sea birds, bounded by the maritime towns of Winchelsea, Hythe and Rye. The Royal Military Canal was built in the early 1800s as a defence against a possible invasion from Napolean. The groynes at Cliff End were constructed in 1926 to protect the fragile coastline following serious floods. Since then a sea wall has been constructed and the groynes left to rot away.