Queen's Bower
Queen's Bower | |
Hampshire | |
---|---|
Alverstone Road, Queen's Bower | |
Location | |
Island: | Isle of Wight |
Grid reference: | SZ569847 |
Location: | 50°39’33"N, 1°11’43"W |
Data | |
Post town: | Sandown |
Postcode: | PO36 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Isle of Wight |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Isle of Wight |
Queen's Bower (or Queen Bower) is a hamlet on the Isle of Wight, Hampshire, that has effectively merged with Winford and Apse Heath to create a village. It is in the civil parish of Newchurch.
Just to the south is Borthwood, a National Trust property, and Queen's Bower gets its name from a hunting lodge for hunting deer in Borthwood, owned in the 13th century either by Isabella de Fortibus, the last "Queen" of the Isle of Wight, or King Edward I's queen after he took over the Island.[1] Although somewhere along the line between then and the present, the name has become lost in translation as it is believed to have been originally known as 'Queen Dower' as the land was passed down to her.
The only commercial property in the area is the Queen Bower Dairy which is also a caravan park. The National Trust site of Borthwood Copse, which was originally a royal hunting ground is nearby. The area is also home to the 'Isle of Wight Cheese Company' which gets its milk from the dairy farm.
Alongside Alverstone and other nearby settlements, Queen's Bower is one of the locations on the Isle of Wight where red squirrels can often be found.
References
- ↑ Patricia Sibley. Discovering the Isle of Wight.