Island Life Magazine Ltd April/May 2010 | Page 55

history Island Life - April/May 2010 privately owned shops you often find in towns of this size. I dawdle at Ventnor Rare Books before moving on to Alexandra Gardens, built in 1884 on the site of the old watermill where Edward Elgar and his bride Alice spent their honeymoon at villa Number Three. The Rene Howe walk to the Esplanade is in memory of a teacher and local historian and on the way down I pass the Winter Gardens, named by the winner of the competition the council ran in 1936 to find a suitable name for their new recreational outlet. The old mill stream flows through the picturesque Cascade Gardens, designed by Edgar J. Harvey in 1903, and down to the Esplanade where the water is used in the eco-friendly loos built under a sedum roof. Boats bob up and down in Ventnor Haven opened in 2003 on the site of the old harbour and Southern Water’s Seaclean works are Ventnor suffered heavily from wartime raids tastefully disguised by a bandstand and because of the early warning radar station look-out tower. on the top of St. Boniface Down. Houses and I look for the iron rings in the sea wall that shops in North Street and the High Street were were used to secure ropes to the bathing destroyed in a ‘hit-and-run’ attack in 1942 and machines and search the beach for the Ventnor in another attack in 1943, seven people were diamonds Jenkinson mentioned in his 1879 killed. After one raid Lord Haw Haw announced Practical Guide to the Isle of Wight. Sadly, the on the radio that there had been “a great Royal Victoria pier was demolished in 1993. German victory of military target