Many famous men have enjoyed the pleasure of walking Sandown's glorious cliffs:
There are delightful gardens on the cliffs between Sandown and Shanklin, beautiful with rockeries and flowerbeds, and a wide view over the bay which runs from the gleaming white walls of Culver Cliff, rising 250 feet out of the sea, to the sunburnt cliffs on the way to Dunnose.
Sandown has no ancient church, but its 19th century church has a west doorway built in Norman style; it was put here in memory of Sir Henry Oglander, the last of the family which came over with the Conqueror and was part of the life of the Isle of Wight until Sir Henry died in 1874. They would be great people in the island when Sandown Castle was built by Henry VIII. It was second in importance only to Carisbrooke, but the sea destroyed it and Charles I rebuilt it. It was demolished in 1864 and the stones were used for the present fort. Not many minutes walk away are the remains of a building 1000 years older, for we are within easy reach of the famous Roman villa at Brading.
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