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Everything about Beachy Head totally explained

For the cliffs themselves see Seven Sisters Beachy Head is a chalk headland on the south coast of England, close to the town of Eastbourne in the county of East Sussex. The cliff there's the highest chalk sea cliff in Britain, rising to 162 m (530 ft) above sea level. The peak allows views of the south east coast from Dungeness to the east, to Selsey Bill in the west. Its height has also made it a notorious suicide spot.
   The chalk was formed in the Cretaceous period when the area was under the sea, 65 million years ago and earlier. During the Cenozoic Era the chalk was uplifted, and was later eroded to form the dramatic cliffs of the Sussex coast.
   Some of the cliffs were lost in 2001 when, after a winter of heavy rains, a chalk pinnacle known as the Devil's Chimney, collapsed into the sea.
   The name Beachy Head appears as 'Beauchef' in 1274, and was Beaucheif in 1317, becoming consistently Beachy Head by 1724, and has nothing to do with beach. Instead it's a corruption of the original French words meaning Beautiful Headland.
   The prominence of Beachy Head has made it a landmark for sailors in the English Channel. It is noted as such in the sea shanty "Spanish Ladies" : » The first land we sighted was called the Dodman,


   Next Rame Head off Plymouth, off Portsmouth the Wight; » We sailed by Beachy, by Fairlight and Dover,


   And then we bore up for the South Foreland light.

Lighthouses

The headland was also a danger to shipping. In 1831 the construction of Belle Tout lighthouse was started on the next headland west from Beachy Head, but it didn't become operational until 1834. Because its light couldn't be seen in mist and low cloud, it was superseded by a newer lighthouse, 43 m in height, built in the sea below Beachy Head and operational from October 1902.

Beachy Head at war

The third day of fighting in the Battle of Portland, 1653, took place off Beachy Head during the First Anglo-Dutch War. The Battle of Beachy Head, 1690, was a naval engagement during the Nine Years' War. During World War II, the RAF established a forward relay station at Beachy Head to improve radio communications with aircraft. In 1942, signals were picked up at Beachy Head which were identified as TV transmissions from the Eiffel Tower. The Germans had reactivated the pre-war TV transmitter and instituted a Franco-German service for military hospitals and VIPs in the Paris region. The RAF monitored these programmes hoping (in vain) to gather intelligence from newsreels. There was also an important wartime radar station in the area and, during the Cold War, a radar control centre was operational in an underground bunker from 1953 to 1957. There are regular day and evening patrols by the Beachy Head Chaplaincy Team, and a special telephone box with a direct line to The Samaritans. After a steady increase in deaths between 2002 and 2005, there was a marked decrease in 2006 with only seven fatalities, a reduction attributed by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency to the actions of the Chaplaincy Team and local media.

In Popular Culture

Beachy Head is also famous in film. In the 1979 film Quadrophenia, the character Jimmy intends to ride off the chalk cliff top on a Vespa belonging to a gang leader known as ‘Ace Face’. However, this results only in the scooter colliding with the rocks at the base of the cliff.
   Industrial group Throbbing Gristle frontman Genesis P. Orridge's mother had asked him why he never did anything nice, and as a result the band dressed smartly and posed on Beachy Head for the cover photo of 20 Jazz Funk Greats. In the final episode of Little Britain, there's a scene with Andy Pipkin which was filmed at Beachy Head.
   The group Black Box Recorder's album England Made Me features pictures of Beachy Head in the CD booklet, and it's mentioned in the last song of the album, "Hated Sunday".
   In the episode Many Happy Returns from the TV series The Prisoner, Number 6 comes ashore at Beachy Head after 'escaping' from The Village.
   In the episode The Girl Who Was Death from the TV series The Prisoner, Number 6 confronts Death and her insane scientist father Schnipps in the Beachy Head lighthouse (doubling as a missile) in which the lighthouse/missile is blown up.

Further Information

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