Hawkshead and Claife

Hawkshead and Claife is a National Trust property made up of much of the town of Hawkshead and surrounding Claife Woodlands in Cumbria, England. A notable viewpoint is Claife Viewing Station, a grade II listed ruin, overlooking Windermere. Each room was glazed in differing coloured glass to give the effect of viewing the landscape in the changing seasons.

Individual properties in Hawkshead include Tabitha Twitchit's Bookshop, a listed building which formerly displayed works by Beatrix Potter as the Beatrix Potter Gallery. Since the closure of the gallery, the National Trust has been working to keep the art visible in other formats and locations. In 2022 the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Trust – two of the world’s largest Beatrix Potter collections – came together to tell her life story in an exhibition ´Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature`, which opened in London.[1]In 2024, the exhibition travelled to the Morgan Library & Museum in New York.[2]
For walkers and cyclists there is four miles of access along the west shore of Windermere between Claife Viewing Station and Wray Castle.[3] The Castle was given to the Trust with 64 acres (260,000 m2) of land by Sir Noton and Lady Barclay. It has been suggested that, in the longer term, the Castle would be a suitable home for the Trust´s collection of original Beatrix Potter artwork.[4]
Public transport
The Windermere car ferry gives access to Claife from the more developed side of the lake. The Mountain Goat bus service runs a service for foot passengers between Ferry Point and Hawkshead. There is also a pedestrian ferry service to Wray Castle.[5]
External links
- Beatrix Potter Gallery at Hawkshead information at the National Trust
- Claife Viewing Station, Overlooking Windermere information at the National Trust
References
- ^ "Inside the "Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature" exhibition". V&A. Retrieved 12 December 2025.
- ^ "Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature". www.themorgan.org. 2024. Retrieved 13 December 2025.
- ^ "Windermere west shore walk". National Trust. Retrieved 12 December 2025.
- ^ "Wray Castle Restoration Project". Retrieved 12 December 2025.
- ^ "Take the green cruise to Wray to explore the beautiful lakeshore grounds". Windermere Lake Cruises. Retrieved 9 December 2025.