Photo in header: Beatrix Potter by Charles G.Y. King vintage snapshot print, May 1913 NPG P1825 © National Portrait Gallery, London
28 Jul 1866 – 22 Dec 1943
Kents Cavern
Beatrix Potter was an English writer, illustrator, natural scientist, and conservationist best known for ’The Tale of Peter Rabbit’. The children’s writer visited Kents Cavern Prehistoric Caves in 1893 and many say it was the inspiration for her drawing of the entrance to Mrs Tiggy-Winkle’s house. She wrote after visiting the cave:
“... I was pretty much exhausted when we found it, but by dint of eating cinnamon and the excitement of going into a cave, recovered.”
“The dilapidated wooden door was flush into the bank. Outside an artificial plateau or spoil-bank of slate, overgrown.”
Kents Cavern is one of Europe's top Stone Age Caves, and the location of the oldest find of an early-modern human in North West Europe. Not only that, Kents Cavern is unique on a global stage too: as one of only two caves in the world where three or more different species of humans are found, and the only one open to the general public. An award-winning attraction, there are daily tours where you’ll unearth the secrets of the Devonian and Quarternary periods and find out about the Great Victorian Excavation (Agatha Christie’s father had a hand in that too!). Refresh and relax in the restaurant and shop.
Download your trail map here.