Saturday, 30 September 2017

Clacton-on-Sea - Kiss me quick

3. Clacton-on-Sea 

Clacton has it all; a pier, arcades, a golf course, seagulls that form up as squadrons to descend on waste bins, caravan parks and even an airfield. The Clacton Air Show, for which we were too early, takes place in August




Developer Peter Bruff founded Clacton as a seaside town before he moved up the coast to make a start on Frinton. Originally the main means of admission to Clacton to was by sea; steamships operated by the Woolwich Steam Packet Company docked from 1871 at Clacton Pier.

This is London’s Blackpool

Butlin's first holiday camp opened at Skegness in 1936 was followed by Clacton, two years later. The camp closed on the outbreak of war in 1939 and was immediately taken over by the Army. It was intended to use the site for housing prisoners of war and barbed wire and floodlights soon surrounded the camp, much to the anger of local residents who feared the lights would attract the enemy.

Clacton’s camp was sadly closed 1983 when, due our discovery of Spain and British holidaymakers made a mass exodus to the Costa Brava. At the time Clacton employed over 900 seasonal staff with a further 67 permanent workers.
However a buyer was found in the form of a company called Amusement Enterprises, sadly the new venture only lasted 4 months.

The place does have an exuberant atmosphere. And if you keep your eyes peeled some wonderful 1930’s architecture, one instance being the Gentlemen’s Toilets on the Pier – huge and all tiled and ceramic like the nave of some basilica.


My good friend photographer and architect conceived the idea Travels with My Architect. It was and is a series of seaside jaunts where Trevor with cameras and I, with Moleskine and pens visit the offbeat parts of the Essex, Suffolk and Kent and get the place down on paper and film.  We seek out the unusual, outré, and idiosyncratic bits of any place where we end up.


Our early travels to Jaywick, Canvey Island, Shotley and Dungeness are published in the book Curious Coast. You can download the PDF for free right here http://www.timbaynesart.co.uk/free-stuff.html

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Thank you very much for your comments - Tim