The Francis Frith Collection.
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Mother Iveys Bay, Cornwall

Mother Iveys Bay photos

Displaying 3 of 3 old photos of Mother Iveys Bay.   View all Mother Iveys Bay photos

Mother Iveys Bay, 1901 photo

Mother Iveys Bay, 1901

Mother Iveys Bay, Mullet Rocks 1901 photo

Mother Iveys Bay, Mullet Rocks 1901

Mother Iveys Bay, view from Mullet Rocks 1901 photo

Mother Iveys Bay, view from Mullet Rocks 1901

Mother Iveys Bay photos
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Mother Iveys Bay maps

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

Mother Iveys Bay map

Historic map of Mother Iveys Bay

Cornwall map

Illustrated Victorian map of Cornwall

Mother Iveys Bay map

Historic Map of any Mother Iveys Bay postcode

Mother Iveys Bay maps
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Mother Iveys Bay books

Displaying 0 of 1 books about Mother Iveys Bay and the local area.   View all Mother Iveys Bay books

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St Ives Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £11.99  £3.60

Mother Iveys Bay books
View all 1 Mother Iveys Bay and Cornwall books

Memories of Mother Iveys Bay

Mother Iveys Bay memories
Read and share Mother Iveys Bay memories

Displaying a selection of personal memories of Mother Iveys Bay .
Add your memory of Mother Iveys Bay or of a photo of Mother Iveys Bay.

Our Picnic While Boscastle Flooded

On the day of the Boscastle flood I went with my wife Carmela, and our kids Molly, Libby and George for a walk up to the lighthouse on Trevose head above mother Iveys Bay. The sun was shining beautifully though the wind was strong (as it always is on the cliffs). We stopped halfway above the lifeboat station to eat our picnic lunch and looked along the coast towards Tintagel and Boscastle. The sky was black in that direction and as we sat in the sun on the grass around the high mounted bench at the top of the hill we remaked that someone was getting wet over there. It was only when we got back to our tent where we could get a phone signal that we started getting messages from worried family who had been trying to contact us for hours because they had heard and seen news of terrible flooding and cars washed into the sea. We told them the weather was beautiful and not to believe all they heard on the news and only later realised what had happened a few miles from our lovely picnic as we watched on. God only knows how none were killed that day. That would have spoiled our picnic !

Shared on 03 July 2008 by Robin Greaves.

Rowing our boat




My children, Molly, Libby, and George loved taking turns with me rowing across from the shallower of the two beaches the short distance across the calm bay to the lifeboat station which as we got closer loomed large like something from a James Bond adventure. We came ashore on the small beach under the lifeboat station that appears at low tide and explored under the legs and hulk of the boat store and slipway. On the way back a seal popped up alongside to inspect us but finding us thoroughly uninteresting lay on its back in the water to bask in the sun.

Shared on 03 July 2008 by Robin Greaves.

Cornwall memories

Summer of ''67

I won the Cornish longboard championships at Constantine Bay in 1967. I was the profesional lifeguard at Treyarnon Bay in 1967 and 1968. Friendships established then and still true include Anhtony Richards, Robert Ede, David Powell, Peter Andrews, Rick Stein, Steve Bond, Andrew Blight, Rip Kirby, John Ball, John Jewell, Mike Hannaford and others. Brilliant years never to be experienced again

Shared on 15 November 2008 by Stuart Charles.

My favourite place in the world!

I was fortunate enough to live at Trevone and then Padstow from 1951 - 1964, living at Craig-y-Mor which is the white house with the big balcony right down on the bay. I have very happy memories of my childhood there, looking in the rock pools at Rocky Beach and walking to Harlyn Bay with a picnic ... Watching the visitors on the beach all run for cover if there was a shower of rain ... Collecting car numbers from the car park during the summer holidays ...

Having spent my adult life in Hampshire I retired (early) back to Cornwall with my partner and am now living in St Columb Major.  
Trevone still has the same attraction for me as it did all those years ago ... sadly Padstow does not!!

Shared on 04 January 2009

Extracts From Mother Iveys Bay & Cornwall books

Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Mother Iveys Bay, inspired by Frith photos.

Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories

The palm trees add an exotic touch to the park in this view, which looks in a similar direction to the 1890 view (No 23967 on page 43). By this date the open spaces have been infilled with housing, and the Perranporth Hotel can be recognised on the far side of the pond immediately behind the right-hand tree.

This is an extract from Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories

It is just three years after No 41609, above, and the Porthminster Hotel has been given an extension in the form of a smaller version of the original building. This is a steep site, and the road along the front of Draycott Terrace is supported by a substantial stone wall. The terraced cottages in Primrose Valley below are still intact.

This is an extract from Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories

The church could hardly be closer to the sea. Many of the buildings can be recognised today, but they are now separated from the water in the harbour by walls supporting a road and a walkway. The St Ives lifeboat is on its carriage outside the lifeboat house on West Pier near the church. The present lifeboat house is on the near side of the pier.

This is an extract from Newquay to St Ives Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.