More information : An ornamental boat house is built into the bottom of the cliffs north of Ashley Combe, at SS 8556 4835. The building is 12m long and 5m wide. It has two storeys; the roof and some of the back of the upper floor are missing or obscured by landslips. The ground floor consists of two low interconnecting vaulted tunnels. The main tunnel, accessed from the beach, has 4 recessed arched niches in its side and end walls. The other tunnel has one recessed niche, and leads to a small cell, lit by a cruciform window with brick voussoirs. This in turn leads up to the first floor via stone steps. The upper floor is divided into two rooms. The eastern one has a fireplace and bread oven on its east wall. Each of the rooms had a window looking over the sea. The building was surveyed at 1:100 as part of the RCHME Exmoor Project (1).
The building was known as Rockford Cottage and was a boathouse with access through the woods to Ashley Combe (2). It is not marked on the 1st edition 25" map, but is shown on the current 1:2500 map (3,4).
A rapid reconnaissance of the building suggests it may incorporate and reuse the site of an earlier limekiln, of which there are several known along the Exmoor coast, all fed with limestone and coal brought in by boat. At the time of visit, the recessed niche in the rear wall of the main ground-floor tunnel was heavily obscured by shingle thrown up by storms, but incorporates within its head a rectangular opening reminiscent of the draw or poking hole in the draw arch of a limekiln.
A rectangular area in front of the building appears to be have been cleared of shingle to create a sandy beaching area or slipway (see UID 1460091). (5)
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