By the start of the 14th century, Berck was an established fishing village. In 1301, it was recorded to have 150 homesteads with 800 inhabitants. The oldest parts of Berck are now inland from both river and sea, presumably because of
deposition, but at the time of its founding the village was on the coast and what is now the church of St-Jean-Baptiste began its existence as a lighthouse (first wooden, then stone). As a result of the retreating coastline, boats were designed with flat bottoms so that they could be drawn up on the beach. A cart was driven out to them in order to bring in the catch (see Eugène Boudin's painting below). Berck was a location of combat for centuries. The chronicler
Enguerrand de Monstrelet mentions that during 1414 the English garrison in
Calais raided south and burned the town. During the second siege of
Montreuil in 1544, the English advanced from the south and burned 200 houses, the church and the mill as they passed through Berck. What was left of the place was burned by the French on their way to relieve the siege. In the mid-19th century, Berck was given a therapeutic role in the treatment of
tuberculosis. The Maritime hospital was inaugurated in 1869 by
Empress Eugenie. Other hospitals and benevolent institutes were soon created to cater for the sick and those in need of rest and recuperation. It was at this time that the medical benefits of sea bathing were being recommended. The town, advertised as just a three-hour journey from Paris, began to build up its tourist trade with the help of the railways. At first passengers had to alight at the nearby town of
Verton, on the main line to Calais, but in 1893 a
branch line was built connecting Berck with other towns in the region. As well as carrying passengers, the train carried goods traffic from the brick-works at Berck Ville. Known locally as
le Tortillard for its wandering route, it was closed in 1955. There was a later
narrow-gauge line running northwards through the dunes from
Berck Plage to Paris-Plage, as
Le Touquet was then known. It was built in stages via Merlimont between 1909 and 1912, but gradually it sanded over and closed in 1929. File:Berck poster.jpg|Railway advertising File:Train à Berck-Plage 1.jpg|The beach station (1911) File:Convoi en gare de Merlimont (ligne Berck- Le Touquet).jpg|Merlimont dunes station During
World War II the sea front was disrupted by the installation of the Nazi
Atlantic Wall. The town suffered from bombing during the Allied invasion in 1944. This contributed to the diminishing of the ancient fishing industry, which numbered some 150 boats at the turn of the century. It had all but disappeared by the 1960s. Today, although the hospital sector remains economically important, the town has again promoted itself as a tourist attraction. A seaside bathing station, with an immense beach of fine sand on the
Opal Coast, it continues to be a centre for
sand yachting and the new sport of
surfboarding. The former Berck Plage railway station has been converted into a casino. The town has twinned with
Bad Honnef in Germany and with
Hythe in England. ==Buildings==