Walton and Ivythorn Hills is a 34.9 hectares (86 acres) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest near Street at the south-eastern end of the Polden Hills in the English county of Somerset. Walton Hill is south of the village of Walton, and Ivythorn Hill is south of Street. Notified in 1953, the site is now owned and managed by the National Trust who acquired the freehold in 1988.
At the highest point on Walton Hill, which reaches 80 metres (260 ft) above Ordnance datum (mean sea level),[2] there is a topograph or orientation stone used as a triangulation point and highlighting key features of the surrounding landscape including the Somerset Levels and the Admiral Hood Monument.[3][4] It forms the starting point for the 6 miles (9.7 km) long footpath known as the Polden Way.[5]
History
A quarry on Ivythorn Hill produced stone for Street Manor in 1403.[6]Ivythorne Manor is a Grade II* listed building which was built as a monastic dwelling in the medieval era and rebuilt in 1488 by John Selwood, Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey. It later became a country house and was revised and extended from the 16th to 20th centuries by the Marshall and Sydenham families which owned it.[7] Within the grounds is a dovecote which was probably built around 1578 for John Sydenham.[8]
Walton windmill on Walton Hill was described as "new-erected" in 1741, although there had been a mill erected on the site in 1342.[6] It was worked until 1906.[9] It is now a Grade II listed building and private residence.[10][11] There was also a windmill on Ivythorne Hill.[12]
This site is owned and managed by the National Trust. They acquired the freehold of 0.248 hectares (0.61 acres) of Ivythorn Hill in 1988 from Street Estates, which followed 16.606 hectares (41.03 acres) of Walton Hill in 1940 from Polden Farms Ltd and the initial 18.751 hectares (46.33 acres) of Ivythorn Hill and Wood in 1919 from Baron St Audries.[15]
Between 2011 and 2013 a project was undertaken to increase the population of Large blue butterflies on the Polden Hills. This included planting Wild Thyme and managing the grazing on Walton Hill.[17][18]
^Coulthard, Alfred J, and Watts, Martin (1978). Windmills of Somerset and the men who worked them. London: The Research Publishing Co. p. 62. ISBN0-7050-0060-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)