Orchard Bay

Orchard Bay
Orchard Bay on the Isle of Wight
The house just above the beach of Orchard Bay

Orchard Bay is a small bay on the south east coast of the Isle of Wight, England. It lies to the south west of the Ventnor Botanic Garden and just along the coast west from Steephill Cove. It faces south towards the English Channel, its shoreline is 50m in length.

The bay can be accessed by a small footpath at the western end of the bay. The beach is dominated by a house built just above the high water mark.

Smuggling

Operation Eyeful resulted in a large seizure of cocaine and the arrests of Michael Tyrrell, Julie Paterson and Frederick Fillingham and others by officers from HM Customs & Excise. Most of the arrests were made by officers based at HM Customs Shoreham Office.


Andrew Turner the M.P. for the Isle of Wight, made the following statement to the house of Commons on 22 July 2002

"On 8 March, a drug smuggler was jailed for 26 years for leading an operation to bring a record £90 million consignment of cocaine into Britain by yacht. He and five of his accomplices were caught by 150 Customs officers on the Isle of Wight after the smugglers' landing was hampered by storms at the end of a 3,000-mile voyage across the Atlantic from the Caribbean. They had planned to unload 879 lb of cocaine on a private beach at Orchard Bay house near Ventnor, but the weather and the failure of their outboard motor forced them to deposit their cargo on another beach at Woody bay, about a mile away. They were trapped and arrested after members of the gang had spent hours carrying large bales of cocaine along a treacherous cliff-top path to their destination. Officials knew about the smuggling because the men had been kept under surveillance by excise men from the Cowes Customs house, among others. I understand that the smuggler had paid £657,000 for the Orchard Bay property. Customs officers on the island had been tipped off that something big was about to happen, and Operation Eyeful, which was a joint investigation with the National Crime Squad, began. It resulted in the successful apprehension of five smugglers." [1]

Orchard bay House was originally built in 1828 as three coastguard cottages in order to prevent smuggling but was in 1840 acquired for use in smuggling. It is currently let as holiday accommodation. [2]

References

  1. http://www.wightfarmholidays.co.uk/islandinfo/smuggling.aspx
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20110927082301/http://www.christopherscott.co.uk/properties/786. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)

Coordinates: 50°35′12″N 1°13′54″W / 50.5866°N 1.2316°W / 50.5866; -1.2316

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