#Cardinals #StAgnes #2MeterSessions Cardinals perform I Like You live for 2 Meter Sessions. ” / “Cardinals – I Like You | 2 Meter Sessions” (1 user) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IQ8zT7fQnk
Cardinals – I Like You | 2 Meter Sessions

YouTube
#Cardinals #StAgnes #2MeterSessions” / “Cardinals – St. Agnes (Piano Version) | 2 Meter Sessions” (1 user) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ggkXX6_tAc
Cardinals – St. Agnes (Piano Version) | 2 Meter Sessions

YouTube

‘Class action’ lawsuit launched against South West Water over damaging sewage pollution

Sea lovers, surfers and coastal businesses are coming together to sue South West Water (SWW) over the impact…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #environment #Newquay #Penzance #SouthWestWater #StAgnes #Surfing #UK #UnitedKingdom
https://www.newsbeep.com/409352/

DAY 3 - Cycling south UK. After breakfast and a chat with host Demelza I start my 40km, +550m route to St Agnes on the north coast of Cornwall. Really lucky with the warm and sunny weather. The narrow roads and steep hills are very challenging and concentration is needed to drive safely on the carrier ways. Near Cambrose I enjoy a tea and scone at the Olde Pennys Tea Room and 2nd hand store, a cute and homely store with a strange assembly of stuff. Energised I continue to Wheal Coates, a famous ruin of a former tin mine with furnace tower and pump house. Nice little walk around the ruins and along the cliffs before setting off to St. Agnes and a visit to the local museum. From St. Agnes 'only' 17km, +270m to Truro, where I'm very warmly welcomed by LI contact Jonathan and his wife Lucy where I have a nice warm shower, a tasty curry and a saffron scone for dinner/dessert. Great night's rest in the beautiful house. August 2025.

#visitcornwall #cornwall #truro #whealcoates #stagnes
#915 P.A.S. Pool (ed) - Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, New Series, Vol VII, Part 3. Royal Institution of Cornwall, Truro, 1975/6. #Cornwall #Kernow #PASPool #RoyalInstitutionOfCornwall #StGermans #StAgnes #BookOfTheDay
Eine berührende Schau. Zu sehen in St. Agnes in der Alexandrinenstraße 118-121 in Kreuzberg noch bis zum 22. Juni 2025. #1Mai #ErsanMondtag #Asbest #StAgnes
Bluesky

Bluesky Social
Church of Sant'Agnese Rome Italy by Joan Carroll

Church of Sant'Agnese Rome Italy Photograph by Joan Carroll

Fine Art America

Victorian Cornwall’s leading sector: metal mining

There was no question about Cornwall’s leading economic sector in the mid-1800s. In terms of income, productivity and employment it was metal mining. The early 1860s marked the peak of Cornish mining. Deep copper mining had broken out of its eighteenth-century heartland west of Truro in the 1810s, first to mid-Cornwall in the 1810s and then further east in the 1830s and 40s, where it joined earlier smaller tin mining ventures. At the same time, the predominantly tin mining concerns of the St Agnes, Helston and St Just districts continued to employ a large number of miners.

The mining landscape of the Central Mining District – Wheal Grenville looking east along the Great Flat Lode in 1904

In 1861 30 per cent of men aged 15 to 69 were enumerated in the census of that year as working on and in mines. This includes surface workers, enginemen, mine smiths, mine clerks and others, as well as the iconic underground tributer. A map of the relative distribution of these men clearly indicates the districts most affected by mining – west Cornwall from Perranporth to St Just, mid-Cornwall around the Hensbarrow granitic outcrop and east Cornwall (where it had spilled over the Tamar into west Devon in the 1840s.)

Mine relics at Caradon Hill near Liskeard, site of a copper mining boom in the 1840s

Few of Cornwall’s 212 parishes were wholly untouched by mining; a large block in north Cornwall made up the main non-mining district while other non-mining parishes were to be found along the south coast. But of the over 29,000 miners in 1861 over a quarter (7,453) lived in just four parishes – Camborne, Illogan, Redruth and Gwennap. These four comprised the Central Mining District. They accounted for more than twice the number of miners at work in east Cornwall for example, the relative importance of the latter being exaggerated by the lower population density of the area.

The role of mining is therefore perhaps better illustrated by a map of the absolute number of miners, which more clearly portrays the mining districts of Cornwall. Here it is.

#Camborne #Gwennap #Helston #Illogan #miners #Redruth #StAgnes #StJust

Industrialisation and population growth, 1750-1860s

The absolute population growth rate continued to speed up from the 1750s. From around 27% over the previous century, it reached 30% in the three decades from 1751 to 1781, 37% in the next three dec…

Cornish studies resources