, in the middle is the road access tunnel to the Hoe, from the
A20 above the cliff, and on the right is one of the Channel Tunnel equipment sheds. The cliffs above the current park (Round Down Cliff) were
blown up with gunpowder in 1843 to aid the creation of the Dover to
Folkestone railway. In 1880 an
attempt was made from the site to create a tunnel that would pass under the
English Channel but it failed shortly afterwards. In 1895 a
coal mine was sunk there but this closed in 1921 after being very unsuccessful. These activities were served by
Shakespeare Cliff Halt railway station at the western end of the Shakespeare Cliff tunnel; the remains of the platforms can be seen from the road to the car park, but trains still pass through. A community of fisherfolk and others once lived at the foot of Shakespeare Cliff. In the 1980s the site was deemed the most suitable of 60 proposed to dump chalk from Channel Tunnel excavations, and work began on it in 1988. As the 30
hectares that make up the park were totally reclaimed from the sea, the first job to be completed was the building of walls in the sea to create an artificial
lagoon. The tunnel was completed in 1994 and opened by
Queen Elizabeth II and French President
François Mitterrand. The park opened to the public in 1997. Samphire Hoe is the location of the cooling station on the English side of the Channel Tunnel, serving as the counterpart to the French station at
Sangatte across the Channel. == Tourism ==