- West Wycombe Caves
West Wycombe Caves, also known as Hellfire Caves, located in the
Chiltern Hills ,Buckinghamshire ,England , are most well known as a meeting place for members ofThe Hellfire Club . The caves were extended by Sir Francis Dashwood (later Lord le Despencer) between 1748–1752. They provided work for unemployed farm workers following a succession of harvest failures, and lie close to Dashwood'scountry house ,West Wycombe Park (now owned by the National Trust).The
chalk mines that were extended to form the caves had existed nearHigh Wycombe for a considerable time. The mines are said to have aprehistoric origin, and were presumably created to extract theflint found in the chalk to make hand tools. Locally, flint is used as a building material. The entrance to the caves is built from flint, and St Lawrence's church, above the Inner Temple, is also built using flint. Due to the extensive alterations made by Dashwood, all evidence of the caves' earlier history seem to have been destroyed.The underground "rooms" are named, from the Entrance Hall, through the Circle, Franklin's Cave (named after
Benjamin Franklin , a friend of Dashwood who stayed with him at West Wycombe), the Banqueting Hall, the Triangle, to the Miner's Cave; finally, across a subterranean river named the Styx, lies the final cave, the Inner Temple.An alternative viewpoint was advanced by Daniel P Mannix in his book about The Hellfire Club. This theory suggests that the caves had been deliberately created by Dashwood according to a sexual design. Fact|date=February 2007 The design begins at the 'womb' of the Banqueting Hall, leading to rebirth through the female triangle, followed by baptism in the River Styx and the pleasures thereafter of the Inner Temple. Fact|date=February 2007 This theory is not mentioned in National Trust literature and is allegedly refuted by the Dashwood family. Fact|date=February 2007 The flint mining theory is also questionable because the Chiltern Hills flint bed overlays the chalk escarpment and does not have to be mined except by means of small open flint dells of which there are many on the area. Fact|date=February 2007
The caves were refurbished and made suitable for visitors during the 1950s by the late
Sir Francis Dashwood, 11th Baronet . They are now open as a tourist attraction, with life-sizedwaxwork figures in period costume illustrating the life of the caves in the 18th century. The caves have attracted over 2 million visitors since 1951.External links
* [http://www.hellfirecaves.co.uk/ The Hellfire Caves]
* [http://www.showcaves.com/english/gb/misc/WestWycombe.html Subterranea of Great Britain: West Wycombe Caves]
* [http://www.blather.net/shitegeist/2006/02/the_hellfire_club_tunnels_and.htm The Hellfire Club Caves at West Wycombe]
* [http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0450040968 The Hell-Fire Club by Daniel P Mannix]
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