row of beach houses on sand

🏖️ The 1950s Seaside Special: Travelling with a 1957 Holiday Guide (Part 4 – Camber Sands)

Date: June 29th
Category: Vintage Travel | Coastal Escapes | Antique Guidebook Series


Flat shoes on. Thermos packed. Sand-shielding umbrella secured. We’re taking a trip to Camber Sands, a place the 1957 British Railways Holiday Guide calls:

“A pleasing stretch of coastline ideal for quiet bathing and contemplative rest, especially suitable for families, readers, and the less rambunctious sort.”

In other words: if you’re after discos and dodgems, keep moving. But if you want sky, sand, and the smell of seaweed in the air — Camber still delivers.

Let’s see how this iconic East Sussex retreat stacks up, 68 summers later.


🚂 Getting There: Then vs. Now

1957:

  • Take the train to Rye, then a local omnibus or taxi to Camber Sands
  • “Modest, yet sufficient transport,” according to the guide

2025:

  • Still no direct train to Camber itself — but Rye station is charming, with good signage and a café called “Platform Toast”
  • Buses run regularly in summer, and many visitors cycle the route past fields, sheep, and the occasional bemused pheasant

🏖️ Camber Sands – Then & Now

Then (1957)

  • Famous for its wide sands and rolling dunes
  • Bathing huts for hire, with modest privacy screens
  • Limited amusements — mostly deckchairs, ice cream, and walking
  • Described as “invigorating yet unshowy”

Now (2025)

  • The sands are still wide — some of the best in the country, in fact
  • Dunes perfect for windbreaks, picnics, and children disappearing dramatically during hide-and-seek
  • Kite surfers and sandcastle competitions now add a touch of chaos
  • Still very little in the way of commercialisation — and that’s exactly why people love it

✅ Verdict: Camber has aged like a classic straw sunhat — weathered, relaxed, and utterly charming.


🧳 Accommodation Notes from 1957

“The visitor will find cottages and chalets aplenty, along with boarding houses most obliging. Early booking is encouraged, particularly during ‘Factory Fortnights’.”

We stayed in a converted 1950s chalet, now an Airbnb with fibre-optic broadband and its original pine wardrobe. Delightful.

Nearby, we spotted several vintage signs still intact:

  • “NO SWIMMING DURING THE TEA HOUR”
  • “WASH SAND OFF BEFORE RETURNING TO THE BOARDING HOUSE”
    (We obeyed both, out of respect.)

🍦 Dining, Delays & Dunes

  • Fish and chips eaten from newspaper? Yes.
  • Ice cream flavours not invented in 1957? Also yes (salted caramel and lavender, anyone?)
  • Tea served in thermoses, with Rich Tea biscuits still managing to turn to mush at the mere scent of sea air? Classic.

🧁 Best find of the day: A pop-up tea stand in a wind-weathered caravan, with hand-written signs and sponge cake so light it floated off the plate.


📚 Want to Know More?


💬 Did You Holiday at Camber?

If you’ve ever been to Camber — in 1957 or last week — we want to hear from you.
Tag @TimeTravellersGuild with #1957SeasideSpecial — we’ll feature your stories, vintage snaps, and beachy wisdom in our Summer Scrapbook on Sunday.

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