Dorset is famous for its spectacular coastline, for its historic towns, for its eco-foodie reputation, for Hardy and Fowles. But there’s much more behind the tourist-friendly façade – subversion, rebellion and revolt, wealth and poverty, ghost stories and rich folklore. Dorset is home to the largest, but now lost, Neolithic earthwork in Britain. Its history can surprise – from the murky origins of the Cerne Abbas Giant to the black American GIs stationed here in wartime, to the revived pagan ritual of the Filly Loo.
Woolcott criss-crosses the county, making connections, uncovering the hidden and the forgotten. The largest (and lost) Neolithic earthwork in Britain contrasts with Victorian pleasure gardens and nightlife in Bournemouth. Trade unionism originating from Tolpuddle, the legacy of black GIs, the model village of Milton Abbas, vie for the reader’s attention with the importance of Dorset for writers like William Barnes, TE Lawrence, Hardy, Fowles and Shelley, and artists John Piper, Tena Gardiner and Elizabeth Frink. Tombstoning at Lulworth, exploring Chesil Beach and the Fleet, boat trips along the coast, walking the Dorset Gap, modern pagan celebrations at Filly-Loo: Real Dorset covers all aspects of life past and present in this richly historical and much-visited edge of south west England. Locals and tourists alike may think they know Dorset: Jon Woolcott’s book may well prove that there is plenty more to learn about it. Illustrated with the authors black and white photographs.