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Watchet Somerset

Scenic Place • Somerset • TA23 0AS
Watchet Somerset

Watchet is a small harbour town on the Somerset coast at the foot of the Quantock Hills, a working port of considerable historical depth and modest visual charm whose combination of the active harbour, the local museum, the connection with Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the character of an unfashionable but genuine working coastal community makes it one of the more interesting small destinations on this section of the coast. The harbour was operational from the Saxon period and the town's long history as a port for the Somerset and Bristol Channel trade gives it an economic and historical depth that more obviously picturesque coastal settlements sometimes lack. The connection with Coleridge is the most culturally significant dimension of Watchet's identity. Coleridge is believed to have conceived The Rime of the Ancient Mariner while walking with William Wordsworth and Dorothy Wordsworth in the Quantocks in November 1797, and the mariners departing from a small Somerset harbour that features in the poem has been associated with Watchet since at least the early nineteenth century. A statue of the Ancient Mariner on the harbourside, erected in 2003, commemorates the connection with one of the most celebrated poems in the English language. The Watchet Market House Museum provides an excellent local history of the port and the surrounding Somerset coast, and the West Somerset Railway, one of the longest preserved steam railways in Britain, connects Watchet with Minehead to the west and Bishops Lydeard to the east.

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