Landewednack, Cornwall
Landewednack photos
Displaying 1 of 15 old photos of Landewednack. View all Landewednack photos
Landewednack maps
Historic maps of Landewednack and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Landewednack maps
Landewednack books
Displaying 3 of 12 books about Landewednack and the local area. View all Landewednack books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Landewednack
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Cornwall memories
The shop on the right was run by my great-uncle Charles Johns, and the sweetshop next door by the Steps brothers, with Triggs shop on the left.
Shared on 23 May 2008
We moved to Cadgwith in 1979, the best move of our lives, everyone was so friendly. Our two boys grew up there and had the time of their lives fishing and playing on the beach. We were sad to leave in 1987 but will never forget Cadgwith. Steve and Shiela Thornton.
Shared on 03 July 2008
My sixth and last billet as an evacuee during World War II, was at Bodrigy, Cadgwith. Bodrigy was being run almost like a boarding school with about 20 children there, and a matron to oversee us. We all went to school in Ruan Minor, and we would walk across the fields to school. I loved living in that... [more]
Shared on 06 September 2006
I have been coming to Kennack since I was a toddler. But 1972 was the first of many years that stand out to me. My family met another family and we are still in touch now, 36 years and more later.
My memories are so many, borrowing beach donkeys and going off on safaris, making dens, rope swings across rivers.... [more]
Shared on 10 November 2008
In 1969 I was 15 and quit school. I was hitch hiking and ended up in Coverack. I was drinking in the local pub, the Paris Hotel I think, when some construction guys offered me a job digging ditches and laying sewer pipes. It was summer, and the foreman had rented a field from a local farmer. He lived in a... [more]
Shared on 29 October 2009
While still at Helston Grammar School, I worked at the Headland Hotel during one summer. Pickles was the manager, he was a tyrant but I seemed to get the better of him. I wrecked the lawn-mower running over a rock while pushing it up and down those front lawns in the picture, he tried to make me pay for it out... [more]
Shared on 07 October 2008
I remember coming to live at Barclay House in the September with my sister Rachel and my Mum and Dad. We moved from Sutton Coldfield because Dad no longer wanted to work as a garage mechanic for someone else, and he wanted to own his own garage. Mum was not at all keen as she was leaving her friends behind, but... [more]
Shared on 15 February 2008
The large house to the right of the picture is called Barclay House, it's also St Keverne garage. We moved there in late 1979 and lived there for 3 years, having to leave it behind and move back to the north west due to family problems. We bought the house from Pat Johnson who had lived there with her husband.
Looking... [more]
Shared on 28 May 2007
Extracts From Landewednack & Cornwall books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Landewednack, inspired by Frith photos.
Cornwall A Century Ago Photographic Memories
Church Cove is on the east side of the Lizard. The building on the left is the lifeboat station, erected in 1885; it is unusual that it is set at right angles to the beach. Difficulties in launching and retrieving the lifeboat led to its demise in 1899, in favour of Polpeor Cove on the Lizard itself. Note the capstan houses... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
Church Cove was a pilchard fishing place, with boats hauled up the steep beach, and there was also a lifeboat station here for a while until 1899. Pleasure steamers from Falmouth, such as the 'New Resolute' seen here, called to land passengers in rowing boats. At low tide the visitors clambered out onto the Battleship Rock in the centre of the... [more]
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Mullion takes its name from St Melaine, the 6th- century Bishop of Rennes, who excommunicated two British priests who went to preach on his patch. St Mellion, at the other end of the county, is also named after him.
Read more and see photos from this book.
