St Austell
St Austell maps (2 available)
St Austell books (5 available)
- 20 photos on St Austell appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of St Austell
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on St Austell and Cornwall
St Austell memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Cornwall below.
Cornwall memories
The tiny port of Charlestown
I briefly attended Charlestown Infants' school in 1942 as it accepted children a years earlier than Mount Charles Infants (just a mile away) which I lived just a few yards from on Porthpean Road. I was four years old at the time.
During those war years the quaysides around the inner dock had corrugated iron buildings that were used in the fitting out of inshore mine-sweeper vessels. These boats were built at nearby Par and had their engines and machinery fitted at Charlestown. These sheds were removed at the end of the war and once more the harbour looked very much as it had when it was built by Charles Rashleigh in the last decade of the 1700s.
...read more here
A memory of Charlestown contributed by Peter Marks
Anti Invasion Devices
I spent many happy hours on Porthpean beach, both with my family and my friends during the summer holidays. I remember the anti invasion devices well as we used them as monkey bars. After the war they became very rusty with many sharp rusty edges to get snagged on.
I also remember during the war years that a few miles off the beach were some bombing targets and we used to watch bomber pilots practising their skills from time to time.
Peter, I believe you were a year behind me at St. Austell Grammar school and that a few years back I think we swapped emails. I now live in Marblehead, Massachusetts, having moved here in 1968.
A memory of Porthpean contributed by Gerry Mewton
The boat house Porthpean Beach
The tall building at the bottom left hand side of the slipway leading down to the beach was used by a Mr Axford who had two or three wooden rowing boats that he hired out by the hour. He would sit on a bench outside the boathouse and having paid the appropriate monies one was issued with a pair of oars and allocated a boat. My dad bought one of Charlie's boats in the early '50's which we kept on the quay at Charlestown and used it for recreation fishing. We initially powered it with a 4hp Seagull outboard. Then, on one of our fishing trips we come across a large quantity of wood planks that must have washed overboard from ...read more here
A memory of Porthpean contributed by Peter Marks
Anti-invasion defences-Porthpean beach
During the invasion scare of WW2, Porthpean beach was protected from seaborne landings by the Germans by having anti-landing craft defences built along the length of the beach at I believe, the low tide mark. This consisted of an A-frame structure constructed from scaffold piping. Possibly this had mines attached but I have found no confirmation of this.
Additionally, on the slope leading up from the beach there were pyramid shaped, concrete pillars about four or five feet high that would prevent vehicles using it.
One of these can be seen in the photo "View from beach c. 1955"
I lived on Porthpean Road at MountCharles from 1939 till 1955 and now live in Illinois, USA
A memory of Porthpean contributed by Peter Marks
Extracts From St Austell & Cornwall books
This photograph looks
from the west towards
St Austell in its rural
setting. Housing has not
yet developed out into
the fields where tall elm
trees break up the line of
the hedgerow on the
right. The tower of Holy
Trinity church is just
visible above two fields
in the centre of town,
and terraced houses
along Bodmin Road and
the Workhouse can be
seen towards the left of
the picture.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".
A view from Church Street showing the ornate tower, the south porch with a priest’s chamber above, and the crenellated
south aisle. The clock faces on the tower date from 1885.The granite façade of the Town and Market Hall looms behind, with
The Queen’s Head hotel on the left.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".
The late-15th century tower of Holy Trinity church is one of the finest in Cornwall; its west side has carved figures depicting
the Trinity, the Annunciation and the Resurrection. Quite a crowd has gathered for the photographer in front of the church
and also outside W H Smith’s premises on the corner, where the Western Daily Mercury is for sale.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".
Arcades supported by tall granite piers with carved capitals
separate the nave from the north and south aisles. The earlier
chancel beyond has smaller arcades and is slightly out of
alignment. The church was restored in the 1870s, when the
chancel was re-roofed and new benches were installed.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".
The granite and brick arched St Austell or Trenance Viaduct was completed by the Great Western Railway in the year of this
photograph to replace I K Brunel’s timber fan viaduct of 1858.The latter can be seen behind the new double-track structure,
and its old stone piers remain to this day.
An extract from from"St Austell Bay Photographic Memories".





