Reportedly, de Godeton felt guilty for having scavenged wine, destined for a monastery from the wreck of the
St Marie of
Bayonne in
Chale Bay. He was ordered, on pain of excommunication, to make amends by building this lighthouse. Fires were lit in the lighthouse tower to warn ships at sea of the presence of the coast. On nearby
St Catherine's Down is
St Catherine's Oratory, locally known as the "Pepperpot", a stone lighthouse built in the 1323 by Walter De Godeton. It is Britain's oldest medieval lighthouse. A replacement lighthouse was begun in 1785. However it was never completed. Locally this half-finished building is known as the "salt pot".
LB&SCR H1 class 4-4-2 no. 40 (later no. B40 and 2040) was named ''St. Catherine's Point'' after this landmark.
Radio history The first effective demonstration of radio, from a boat off
Sandbanks in
Dorset, to here, occurred. It was known as
Niton Wireless Station, next to the lighthouse. On 23 January 1901, the first over-the-horizon radio transmission took place to the Lizard Wireless Station at
Bass Point (England) in
Cornwall. ==Climate==