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Penzance

Penzance photos (264 available)

Old photo of Penzance

Penzance maps (2 available)

Old map of Penzance

Penzance books (9 available)

Penzance memories

The Fish Shop

Penzance, Market Jew Street 1920

The fish shop shown on the right belonged to Mr Phillip Tregurtha.
Contributed by Alan Tregurtha

Cornwall memories

The Fish Shop

Penzance, Market Jew Street 1920

The fish shop shown on the right belonged to Mr Phillip Tregurtha.
A memory of Penzance contributed by Alan Tregurtha

I wish I had one!

This town is where my ancestors started to spread far and wide, beginning in 18th century or thereabouts. Some distant cousins still live there, I'm sure.
A memory of Mousehole contributed by Geoff Drew

The churchyard at Ludgvan

My father, Joseph Martin and Ruth, my mother, are buried at Ludgvan, together with his parents (Joseph and Sarah). The latter died in 1949/1950 and had lived at Castle Gate (Badgers Cross). My father attended school in Ludgvan and worked as a journalist pre-War and until 1952 on many local papers including The Cornishman, in Penzance, sometimes writing under the pen-name of John Penwith (Leaves from a Cornish Notebook). There are many references to Ludgvan in his writings. As a toddler, I lived at Trezelah and went to school in Gulval.
David Martin.
A memory of Ludgvan contributed by David Martin

Extracts From Penzance & Cornwall books

Penzance, the Merry Maidens c1864

Situated near St Buryan, the Merry Maidens stone circle is of the Broze Age; it is one of the most complete stone circles in Cornwall and consists of nineteen stones. The blocks are evenly spaced and are each about four feet high. It is an exact circle, but it appears to have no astronomical significance. The nearby circle of Boscawen-un also has nineteen stones.
An extract from from"Cornwall County Memories".

Penzance, the Merry Maidens c1864

Situated near St Buryan, the Merry Maidens Stone Circle is of the Bronze Age; it is one of the most complete stone circles in Cornwall and consists of nineteen stones. The blocks are evenly spaced and are each about four feet high. It is an exact circle, but it appears to have no astronomical significance. The nearby circle of Boscawen-un also has nineteen stones.
An extract from from"Ancient Monuments and Stone Circles Photographic Memories".

Penzance, the Promenade 1906

A bracing walk along the promenade is part of the holiday at a seaside resort such as Penzance. Long skirts are not best suited to the wind, as we can see from these ladies passing the Queen’s Hotel. The seaside flavour is completed by the bucket and spade shared by the two girls.
An extract from from"Cornwall County Memories".

Penzance, On the Rocks 1906

Penzance is celebrated as a watering-place on account of its mild climate, which makes it the resort of invalids suffering from pulmonary complaints. The old town, spread picturesquely round part of Mount’s Bay, has delightfully narrow streets that ascend the hill from the fine esplanade at the edge of the sea. Penzance is frequently enlivened by the departure of the fleet of the fishing-boats for which the district is famed.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Seaside".

Penzance, an Old Cross in Morrab Gardens 1906

In Victorian times many old Celtic crosses and other monuments were ‘recycled’ as the designs became fashionable: this one is in the Victorian Morrab Gardens near the sea front in Penzance.
An extract from from"Ancient Monuments and Stone Circles Photographic Memories".