Falmouth
Falmouth photos (561 available)
Falmouth maps (2 available)
Falmouth books (12 available)
- 15 photos on Falmouth appear in 6 Frith books - View photos of Falmouth
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Falmouth and Cornwall
Falmouth memories
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Cornwall memories
Thomas family
My grandfather and his family all lived in Busvannah. Alfred Charles Thomas was born in 1887 (according the family bible which has been passed down to me as the last survivor carrying the name). He had a number of brothers and sisters: I seem to remember that Henry was gassed in the Great War, and only died in the 1930's. As a child in South Africa, I had to write to his sisters Mabel and Nora. The last letter I received from great aunt Nora was in 1965. My grandfather emigated to South Africa in 1912, where my father and I were born. My grandfather opened a butcher shop in Hillbrow Johannesburg, in which he was considerably successful. He always told ...read more here
A memory of contributed by Howard Thomas
damn good lodgings
go to blacksmiths cottage for fine fayre
A memory of Mylor contributed by susan petrozzi
The start of my quest
This is Lower Castle Road and the second cottage which is a slightly darker colour belonged to my parents-in-law, Edward and Nancy Honeyman-Brown. They originally lived in Essex but had taken their holidays in Porthscatho for many years taking hours and hours travelling through the night with their two young sons. On one such visit when the boys had grown up they saw this cottage for sale, it needed complete modernisation but they took on the challenge and turned it into the most lovely cottage. Edward lived for 5 years loving every moment here and spent most of his time visiting all the churches trying to put a family tree together for his wife whose ancestors had originally come from Truro, ...read more here
A memory of St Mawes contributed by Andrea Honeyman-Brown
My grandparents Houseboat
My grandfather (William Bryant) built a houseboat and moored it in Percuil Creek where he, my grandmother and my mother would spend their summers in the 40s. My grandfather and his wife Dorothy were both born in Falmouth in 1902/1903 and my mother Patricia was born in Falmouth in 1932. My grandfather was a shipwright working in Falmouth dockyard and they also lived in Mylor Bridge. They all spent most of their lives in boats in and around Mylor and Falmouth. My sister and I spent our childhood in Mylor Bridge in the 50's and early 60's and regularly visit Falmouth and family members.If anyone has information about my family, I would love to hear from ...read more here
A memory of Percuil contributed by Elizabeth Seward (Bryant)
Extracts From Falmouth & Cornwall books
The old town, quaint and picturesque, is situated on the low ground near the edge of the harbour, and as a matter of course, the streets are very narrow. The new portion of the town lies for the most part on high ground, and the commodious houses and charming terraces overlook the magnificent harbour on the one side and the English Channel on the other.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Seaside".
Like Greek waiters standing outside their tavernas, crewmen do their best to tempt tourists into parting with a shilling
or two. As well as excursions up the Fal, ferries operated to Flushing and St Mawes Castle. Larger excursion steamers
were employed on runs to the Lizard and Penzance. The boat on the far right might be the River Fal Steamship Co’s
‘New Resolute’, built at Malpas, Cornwall in 1882. Of wood construction, she weighed 40 tons. She was later fitted
with an enclosed wheelhouse.
An extract from from"Victorian and Edwardian Maritime Album".
The central tower was built in 1540-45, and was designed so that guns could be mounted on the roof as well as on the two gun decks inside. The wall to the right is a part of the second-phase lower battery which gave Pendennis a further fourteen gun positions. The northern entrance block ,which included the governor’s lodging, marks the third building phase; it was completed in c1550.
An extract from from"English Castles".
The expanse of harbour we see here is only a small part of this natural seaport. The
calm waters are a significant feature of the shelter here, even when storm force
winds are blowing outside in the bay. The activities of yachts, fishing and rowing
boats provide engrossing fascination to bystanders.
An extract from from"Picturesque Harbours Photographic Memories".
Henry VIII’s Pendennis Castle stands proud on the headland which gives shelter to the dock area of one of the great natural harbours of the world. A shipyard developed here from 1860, and by the late 19th century there were breakwaters, repair facilities and two dry docks of 350ft and 537ft. The docks grew further, with more dry docks, and today Castle Drive is a popular place to view the shipping. The large block on the right is the Falmouth Hotel, a reminder that Falmouth was also a holiday resort.
An extract from from"Cornwall County Memories".







