Beer is mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086, at which time it was located within
Colyton hundred and had 28 households. Its name is not derived from the
drink, but from the
Old English word
bearu, meaning "
grove" and referring to the original
forestation that surrounded the village. It is a coastal village that grew up around a smugglers' cove and caves which were once used to store contraband goods. These are now part of the attraction of the village. Beer is home to a cave complex, the
Beer Quarry Caves, resulting from the quarrying of Beer stone. This stone has been prized since
Roman times, because of its workability for carving and for its gentle yellow colour on exposure to air. Beer stone was used in the construction of 24 cathedrals around the UK, including
Exeter Cathedral,
Westminster Abbey and
St. Paul's Cathedral, and was also used in the building of
Christ Church Cathedral, Missouri. Bovey House, an
Elizabethan manor house, is a mile inland. Historically, the main sources of income for the village included
fishing and
lace production. Bacteria taken from cliffs at Beer on the south coast were launched to the
International Space Station in 2008. The Beer microbes were placed on the
European Space Agency's (ESA) Technology Exposure Facility and were sent up still sitting on, and in, small chunks of cliff rock from the
Jurassic Coast. After 553-days scientists found that many were still alive. The survivors are now reproducing in a laboratory. This was part of an experiment to study the survival of microbes (which naturally live on the stone) in extreme conditions. A new species of
cyanobacteria was isolated at the
Open University that could be used in future space settlements on the
Moon and
Mars to produce oxygen and break down rocks. at Beer ==Economy==