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Lockengate, Cornwall

Lockengate maps

Historic maps of Lockengate and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Lockengate maps

Lockengate map

Historic map of Lockengate

Cornwall map

Illustrated Victorian map of Cornwall

Lockengate map

Historic Map of any Lockengate postcode

Lockengate maps
View all Lockengate maps

Lockengate photos

We have no photos of Lockengate, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Lanivet, Helmen Tor, Luxulyan, Roche

Lockengate books

Displaying 3 of 12 books about Lockengate and the local area.   View all Lockengate books

Cornwall County Memories
Paperback
rrp £15  £12

Cornwall A Century Ago Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £14  £11.20

Helston Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £13  £10.40

Lockengate books
View all 12 Lockengate and Cornwall books

Memories of Lockengate

Lockengate memories
Read and share Lockengate memories

Displaying a selection of personal memories of Lockengate .
Add your memory of Lockengate or of a photo of Lockengate.

 

Lockengate of the ''40s

I  lived in St Austell as a child but my Uncle Ewart and Aunt Ruby farmed at Trescoll Farm, Lockengate. From a very early age I spent every holiday with them and although only four or five years old at the time, I remember well and fondly those wartime years, the Land Army girls and the two shire horses. (The first... [more]

Shared on 08 January 2008 by Peter Marks.

Cornwall memories

Joan the Wad

I have bought Joan the Wad Cornish pickes at the Abbey and caught a trout in the river that runs in front of it. I was evacuated to the village in the war to Church Town Farm with Mr and Mrs Greenway and there was a large monkey puzzle tree in the front garden. Only this week I was given one... [more]

Shared on 28 August 2006 by John Angus.

Evacuee in this beautiful village of Luxulyan.

I was very fortunate to be evacuated to this beautiful village at the beginning of World War Two. I remember being lined up in the village hall with about fifteen other evacuees. My elder sister was with me, she was eight years old and I was five.  My future mum and dad was to be Mr and Mrs Parker, I can't... [more]

Shared on 02 November 2008

First visit

I first discovered Roche while on a motoring holiday with my parents when I was 12 years old.  Being young and nimble, I was up those ladders like a monkey, much to the horror of my parents.  
My latest visit was last week, Monday 11th September 2006, and although I was ready to try the ladders again, my fiance would... [more]

Shared on 15 September 2006 by David Neville.

The bones-playing shopkeeper

I was born in Stenalees in 1962. When I was a kid the local shopkeeper (before Mr Kemp) used to entertain us kids by playing the bones. In fact he gave me a set when I was 8, which I still have.  Mark Scott.

Shared on 17 March 2008

Mrs Abbot's Minah Bird

My sister Linda worked in Carthew shop back in the late 60s and early 70s. Her boss was a women called Mrs Abbot. She had a Minah Bird that she kept in the kitchen but it could always be heard from the shop. It was a very good talker and was very prone to swearing. Mark Scott.

Shared on 17 March 2008

HALLOWEEN 2007

Ok, on Halloween night 2007 some friends and myself wanted to do something different for our Halloween night, so where better to do it than at the old Bodmin prison.

So off we set at 9 o'clock taking track to the prison. It was a great evening. We spent some hours in the darkest depths of the prison and we... [more]

Shared on 07 March 2008 by Trisha May.

Staff at the Asylum

I found when researching the 1901 census that members of my husband's family worked at the Asylum. My husband's grandfather,  Alfred Charles (Charlie) Southern worked there until his death in 1944.  His job was described as "Mental Nurse".  Charles' sister Glen Dora also worked there as did his mother Anne and other relatives.  Some were described as laundresses.  I wondered whether... [more]

Shared on 18 July 2007

Extracts From Lockengate & Cornwall books

Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Lockengate, inspired by Frith photos.

Helston Photographic Memories

The stream is actually the River Cober, which used to regularly flood this area of Lower Green. When this happened, bands of men were despatched to Loe Bar to dig a channel to drain off the floodwater, and the Corporation, in accordance with custom, presented the Lord of the Manor with a leather purse containing three halfpennies. Today a permanent culvert prevents flooding.

This is an extract from Helston Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Helston Photographic Memories

This picture was probably taken just down the road from Penventon Farm. The big house set back from the road left of centre is Weeth, and past it the road continues down into the valley of the Cober.

This is an extract from Helston Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Helston Photographic Memories

We are looking north-east up the valley to the town. St Michael's is on the skyline, and round the bend in the valley to the left is the site of St John's Priory Hospital, which cared for travellers and lepers from 1220 to 1580.

This is an extract from Helston Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

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