- Bovey Heath
Bovey Heath is a 32 hectare (50 acre) area of heathland between
Bovey Tracey and Heathfield in southDevon , England.Although primarily heathland habitat, the site has some wet mature oak woodland, and is home to rare species such as the
Dartford Warbler ,stonechat ,nightjar and thenarrow headed ant . The reserve has been aSite of Special Scientific Interest since 1989. It became aDevon Wildlife Trust nature reserve in 2002 and a Local Nature Reserve in 2003.History
The heath was probably created around 4000 years ago through the actions of
Bronze Age farmers who would have cleared areas of woodland for grazing and the cultivation of crops. There is at least one Bronze Agetumulus on the site.The Battle of Bovey Heath, a regionally decisive battle during the
English Civil War , took place here on9 January 1646 . The site holds one of only two earthworks in the South West dating to this period; it is aScheduled Ancient Monument . At the time the heath was over 380 hectares (1000 acres) in size, but in the 19th and 20th centuries much of it was destroyed by open-cast mining forball clay . During the Second World War and for a short time after, the site was used as a training ground for American soldiers.Since the war the remaining heath was badly neglected, used as a dumping ground and a place for unauthorised off-roading. This activity was halted by
Devon Wildlife Trust when it took over the site.References
cite web
title = Bovey Heathfield
publisher = Devon Wildlife Trust
url = http://www.devonwildlifetrust.org/index.php?section=places:boveyheathfield
accessdate = 2008-08-05
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