The name Hope Cove may derive tautologically from the
Old Norse word
hóp meaning "bay" or "small inlet". Historically, the village falls into two parts, Outer Hope to the north and Inner Hope to the south. Inner Hope fell within the parish of
Malborough until 1974, when it was united with its neighbour on the other side of a small headland. Both parts of the village originally developed as centre for the local fishing industry. Hope Cove also developed a reputation for
smuggling and for plundering wrecked ships. In 1588 the ships of the
Spanish Armada passed the village as they moved up the
English Channel. After the Armada was defeated and headed back through storms, the
San Pedro el Mayor, a transport ship fitted out as a hospital, was blown onto the rocks between Inner and Outer Hope. The 140 survivors were initially sentenced to death, but were eventually ransomed and sent back to Spain. Hope Cove was the setting for a number of studies by Victorian painter
Sir Luke Fildes; inspiring the cottage in his work in oil
The Doctor. Early in
World War II, 'RAF Hope Cove' was established as a GCI Mobile Radar Station at Soar Farm near
Malborough and in 1941
RAF Bolt Head opened as a fighter satellite airfield on adjacent land with
RAF Exeter as its parent station. Many RAF personnel were billeted in Hope Cove including The Cottage Hotel and The Grand Hotel. Both bases were closed soon after the war ended in 1945 but RAF Hope Cove reopened and was expanded to accommodate an 18,000 sq ft underground R6 ROTOR bunker to meet the growing Soviet threat to peace in the early 1950s. An RAF Married Quarters site was built in Malborough (its houses survive today in private ownership as Malborough Park) but the ROTOR site was only operational from 1956–58 and was finally sold off by the government in 1999. The village featured in the British comedy film
The Supergrass. with location filming in and around Hope Cove in late 1984. Directed by
Peter Richardson and starring
Adrian Edmondson,
Jennifer Saunders,
Dawn French and others from the 1980s alternative comedy group 'The Comic Strip', this was their first feature-length film and was released in the UK in November 1985. ==Lifeboat==