Trips Places Foods Stories Newsletters
Loading...
Loading...
Latest Places to Eat & Drink
View All Places to Eat »
The dock at Cap’s Place
Cap’s Place Island Restaurant
The Puhoi Pub
Jo-Jo-style Bar Dio
Street view of the Exterior
Plywood Palace
Sonker is a deep dish dessert.
Surry Sonker Trail
Recent Stories
All Stories Video Podcast
Most Recent Stories
View All Stories »
Sherman holds a bowl of pápa waháŋpi, a soup that “just connected to my soul.”
On 'Turtle Island,' Indigenous Food Is Not the Past—It’s the Future
The Trailing of Sheep is an annual festival marking the return of sheep from their high-mountain pastures.
Inside America’s First Destination Ski Town
Discover Arizona’s Majesty
20 Extraordinary Places to Visit in 2026.
20 Places to Travel and Transform Yourself in 2026, from Atlas Obscura

No search results found for
“”

Make sure words are spelled correctly.

Try searching for a travel destination.

Places near me Random place

Popular Destinations

  • Paris
  • London
  • New York
  • Berlin
  • Rome
  • Los Angeles
Trips Places Foods Stories Newsletters
Sign In Join
Places near me Random place
All the United Kingdom England Cornwall Hawker's Hut

Hawker's Hut

A writer's tiny retreat built from salvaged shipwreck timbers.

Cornwall, England

Added By
Greg Worden
Email
Been Here
Want to go
Added to list
CAPTION
  erinculley / Atlas Obscura User
View to sea from Hawker’s Hut.   erinculley / Atlas Obscura User
View from inside hutw   erinculley / Atlas Obscura User
Been Here
Want to go
Added to list

About

Despite being the retreat of a clergyman, a visit to Hawker's Hut was probably a pretty good time.

Robert Stephen Hawker was vicar of Morwenstow from 1834 to 1875. Regarded as being a good minor poet and ballad writer (including Cornwall's unofficial anthem "The Song of the Western Men") is remembered today for being an eccentric. 

A small cliff-top hut, Hawker's Hut was built around 1844 from driftwood and shipwreck timbers particularly from the Alonzo.  A small rectangular hut with a stable door built into the cliff and overlooking the sea, the interior has a slate floor and fixed timber seats, and the roof of hut is covered with turf.

Among other things Hawker used his hut for writing poetry, coast watching, and smoking opium. 

Both Alfred Tennyson and Charles Kingsley are known to have visited Hawker in his tiny self-built hut, and one can easily imagine them sharing the pipe, staring out at the ocean and talking about the mysteries of life. It is probably best described by C.E. Byles, Hawker’s son-in-law and biographer. It has not changed much. 

Out of the timbers cast ashore from these wrecks Hawker built the little cabin in the face of the cliffs which is known as “The Hut.” The door is in two hatches; so that a person inside can close the lower hatch as a protection from the weather, while from the upper he looks out on a magnificent prospect of shore and sky and sea. If you sit at the back of the hut, with both hatches open, you see nothing but a few feet of earth, apparently the edge of a precipice, and just over the edge the points of dark and sinister rocks rising amid a swirl of foam hundreds of feet below. The ceaseless thunder of the breakers echoes in your ears; those lions of the deep which “roaring after their prey, do seek their meat from God.” The lurking presence of sunken reefs, their tops visible only at low tide, is revealed by patches of a duller hue on the surrounding water. There they lie, like the horns of some monstrous bull, ready to rip open the side of any hapless vessel that comes within their reach. From such a height are you looking down upon the sea, that you seem to be gazing at a great wall of water. In the midway space between, white-winged gulls float calmly to and fro, uttering their plaintive call.

Hawker's Hut has been well maintained since its original construction and much of the original material is still present. It is currently the smallest property belonging to the National Trust.                            

Places

Discover your next amazing Atlas Place.

Get more unusual and extraordinary places each week with the Atlas Obscura Places newsletter.

Your newsletter subscriptions with us are subject to Atlas Obscura's Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

Related Tags

Architectural Oddities Architecture

Know Before You Go

A short walk from the church. Go from the church towards the cliff and the coastal footpath. Hawker's Hut is to the left. It is signposted.

Community Contributors

Added By

Vordenius

Edited By

Martin, Karitxa, WildGuru, erinculley

  • Martin
  • Karitxa
  • WildGuru
  • erinculley

Published

December 23, 2012

Edit this listing

Make an Edit
Add Photos
Sources
  • Life and Letters of Robert Stephen Hawker by C.E.Byles 1905
  • http//www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=64919
Hawker's Hut
Cornwall, England, EX23
United Kingdom
50.9074, -4.5629

Nearby Places

Church of St. Morwenna and St. John the Baptist

Cornwall, England

miles away

Bude Castle

Bude, England

miles away

The Storm Tower

Bude, England

miles away

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Cornwall

Cornwall

England

Places 20
Stories 7

Nearby Places

Church of St. Morwenna and St. John the Baptist

Cornwall, England

miles away

Bude Castle

Bude, England

miles away

The Storm Tower

Bude, England

miles away

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Cornwall

Cornwall

England

Places 20
Stories 7

Related Places

  • An aerial shot of the Kissing Hall

    Brasília, Brazil

    Darcy Ribeiro Memorial (Beijódromo)

    This building embodies the vision of Darcy Ribeiro, a renowned Brazilian educator, and founder of the University of Brasília.

  • Mériadeck’s Le Centre residential building.

    Bordeaux, France

    Mériadeck Quarter

    This modern district offers a stark contrast to Bordeaux's terrace-lined squares and waterfront façades.

  • Bratislava, Slovakia

    House Attack Bratislava

    We're not in Kansas anymore: the Strabag headquarters has a playful upside-down addition.

  • Hartford, Connecticut

    The Boat Building

    An elliptical glass tower that is known as the world’s first two-sided building.

  • Pátio Victor Malzoni (Google headquarters)

    São Paulo, Brazil

    Casa Bandeirista do Itaim

    Under the towering glass canopy of Google's headquarters in São Paulo's poshest neighborhood, hides a small, charming 18th-century house.

  • Exterior.

    Chicago, Illinois

    The Sullivan Center

    Louis Sullivan’s dark, swirling cast-iron designs envelop a popular department store in this Chicago landmark.

  • The torii arch is out on the shopping street…

    Kyoto, Japan

    Nishiki Tenmangū Shrine

    A 1000-year-old shrine in Kyoto with a poorly planned sacred arch.

  • Rosalie Sharp Centre for Design in the iconic Toronto cityscape.

    Toronto, Ontario

    Rosalie Sharp Centre for Design

    This buzzy, award-winning building hovers 85 feet above the ground on a dozen colorful stilts.

Aerial image of Vietnam, displaying the picturesque rice terraces, characterized by their layered, verdant fields.
Atlas Obscura Membership

Become an Atlas Obscura Member


Join our community of curious explorers.

Become a Member

Get Our Email Newsletter

Follow Us

Facebook YouTube TikTok Instagram Pinterest RSS Feed

Get the app

Download the App
Download on the Apple App Store Get it on Google Play
  • All Places
  • Latest Places
  • Most Popular
  • Places to Eat
  • Random
  • Nearby
  • Add a Place
  • Stories
  • Food & Drink
  • Itineraries
  • Lists
  • Video
  • Podcast
  • Newsletters
  • All Trips
  • FAQ
  • Membership
  • Feedback & Ideas
  • Community Guidelines
  • Product Blog
  • Unique Gifts
  • Work With Us
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Advertise With Us
  • Advertising Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms of Use
Atlas Obscura

© 2026 Atlas Obscura. All Rights Reserved.