Scratchy Bottom: Difference between revisions

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==Outside links==
==Outside links==
{{commons}}
{{commons}}
*[http://www.soton.ac.uk/~imw/durdle.htm Durdle Door, Dorset] – University of Southampton
*Location map: {{wmap|50.62361|-2.28111|zoom=14|name=Scratchy Bottom}}
*Rude Britain: The 100 Rudest Place Names in Britain by Ed Hurst and Rob Bailey ISBN 0-7522-2581-2
*Rude Britain: The 100 Rudest Place Names in Britain by Ed Hurst and Rob Bailey ISBN 0-7522-2581-2
{{coord|50|37|25|N|02|16|52|W|region:GB|display=title}}


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 12:47, 29 January 2019

Scratchy Bottom

Scratchy Bottom (or Scratchy's Bottom) is a clifftop valley between Durdle Door and Swyre Head in Dorset. A dry valley in the chalk, it is surrounded by farmland at its sides and landward end, with cliffs at the seaward end.

The name is thought to refer to a rough hollow.[1] The location came second in a 2012 poll for "Britain's worst place name" carried out by the genealogy website Find My Past.[2]

Scratchy Bottom was the location for the opening of the 1967 film Far from the Madding Crowd, in a scene in which Gabriel Oak's sheep are driven over a cliff by his sheepdog.[3]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Scratchy Bottom)
  • Location map: 50°37’25"N, 2°16’52"W
  • Rude Britain: The 100 Rudest Place Names in Britain by Ed Hurst and Rob Bailey ISBN 0-7522-2581-2

References