Porthtowan

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Porthtowan
Cornwall
Porthtowan+Cliffs.JPG
Porthtowan Cliffs seen from West Cliff
Location
Grid reference: SW695475
Location: 50°16’56"N, 5°14’13"W
Data
Post town: St Agnes
Postcode: TR4
Local Government
Council: Cornwall

Porthtowan is a small village in Cornwall which is a popular summer tourist destination. Porthtowan is on Cornwall's north Atlantic coast about a mile and a half west of St Agnes, and two and a half miles north of Redruth. It is within the ‘Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape’, a World Heritage Site.

The Cornish language name is Porth Tewyn, meaning “Cove of sand dunes”.

Porthtowan is popular with surfers and industrial archaeologists; former mine stacks and engine houses dot the landscape.

Geography

Porthtowan lies along the 1,549 acres of the ‘Godrevy Head to St Agnes’ heritage coast,[1] which is located on the north Cornwall coast washed by the Atlantic Ocean. The village sits between Godrevy Head (with the Godrevy Towans) and St Agnes Head, north of the village of St Agnes.[2] The Godrevy to St Agnes Heritage Coast has been a nationally designated protected area since 1986. The marine site protects 40 species of mammals and amphibians.[3][4]

Porthtowan is within walking distance by National Trust coastal and cliff-side walks. Between Porthtowan and Agnes Head is one of Cornwall's "largest remaining heathland[s]." Ironically, the heath survived - and was not turned into arable land - because of the soil contamination of previous mining activities. Few plants or species other than heathers and spiders can thrive in the area's environmental condition.[5]

Churches

The Chapel on the Hill, Methodist Church

Porthtowan has a Wesleyan chapel.

History

Porthtowan's history is associated with mining and one of its most prominent buildings is a former engine house converted for residential use. Allen's Corn Mill operated at Porthtowan between 1752 and 1816.[6]

Porthtowan owes much of its present-day character to its popularity as a local seaside resort in Victorian and Edwardian times when the local populace from Redruth and the surrounding areas repaired here, particularly on Bank Holidays.

Mining

Coastal settlements in Cornwall between Perranporth and Porthtowan had copper, lead, iron, tin and zinc mines. Porthtowan mines mainly produced copper.[7]

South Wheal Towan

The South Wheal Towan copper mine also operated in the area. Still visible is its Echo Corner mine stack. The mine had a slide lode that intersected with the main lode, Hamptons and Downright lode. In addition to copper pyrites, brown iron ore was also found in the mine.[8]

Tywarnhayle Mine

The Tywarnhayle mine was opened in 1826 as United Hills Mine but the name was changed in 1848 to Tywarnhayle Mine. It was an important source of copper ore until about 1860.[9] Its engine house, Taylors Shaft, is visible in the hills surrounding the coastal village.

The mine was located about a thousand yards southeast of Porthtowan. It was the United Hills Mine in 3 February 1830 when an engine boiler exploded and killed nine people. In 1906 money was invested to drain and work the Tywarnhayle mine. Water was piped out by Cornwall's first electrical centrifugal pumps, made by Worthington Simpson, at the rate of 1,000 gallons a minute. The amount of copper ore mined between 1826 and 1906 was 86,800 tons.[10]

Tywarnhayle Stannary

In Cornwall the mining industry had its own judicial system. Tywarnhayle was one of the four stannaries. There were three others: Blackmore, Foweymore and, lastly, Kerrier and Penwith.

Wheal Coates

The mine is renowned for its pseudomorphs, in this case tin oxide, or cassiterite, that takes on the shape of the feldspar crystals that it replaces within granite.[7]

Wheal Ellen

Wheal Ellen was a 19th-century copper mine. Remains of the mine are visible. It operated primarily from 1826 to 1862.

Wheal Lushington

Wheal Lushington, also known as the New Wheal Towan, was a copper mine located on a hill overlooking the beach. The engine house that was built in 1872 was never used as an engine house and has since been converted for other uses.[11]

Wheal Towan

Wheal Towan was one of Cornwall's most prolific 18th century copper mines.[12][13] In 1772, women and girls worked at the mines, earning 4d to 6d a day.[14] In 1809 Wheal Towan had a cobbing shed which was a building used to break the ore up with a pointed hammer weighing up to 4 pounds. Teenage girls (bal maidens) sat on low benches and broke the ore to remove the rock and break the ore into small pieces. It was a loud and difficult task, but not as difficult as bucking which came next; this required the ore to be broken down into a powder or granules with a flat-ended cast iron hammer.[15] Some time before 1826 the mine resulted in ₤130,000 profit, having been mined to a depth of 150 fathoms. It was then closed until 1826. Two 80 inch cylinder steam engines called Wilson's engine from the engineer Samuel Grose (1791-1866) were used in 1826 to drain the mine. The monthly output between January 1827 and March 1828 from the engine ranged from 48.9 to 84.2 million 94 pound bushels.[12][13]

It was also known as West Wheal Towan (1850-1867), Lelant Wheal Towan and West Wheal Lucy (1872). During the period he owned it, the mine provided Ralph Allen Daniell of Trelissick with a fortune estimated at the time as a "guinea a minute". The first underground steam engine was built in Wheal Towan in 1785. It was reopened in 1872 as West Wheal Lucy and abandoned soon after.

The only remains on the surface are burrows created from the mine's operations. The burrows head in the direction of Towan Cross.[16]

Culture and activities

Beaches

Porthtowan beach is a family and surfing Blue Flag beach. Designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), along the coast are Gullyn Rock, Diamond Rock and sandstone and slate cliffs.[17][18] It has more recently become well known as a surf resort and the surf club building. This is where the judges can be found for the annual SAS Rip Curl Cornish and Open Longboard Championship. The beach is kept under the constant scrutiny of the St Agnes based charity Surfers Against Sewage,[19] which was founded in 1990 to improve water quality in Chapel Porth, Porthtowan, and Trevaunance beaches.[20]

Restaurants and pubs

The Unicorn pub is a beachside bar, eaterie, hotel and hostel, which offers live music, dj's and panoramic sunset views.

Overlooking the Porthtowan Beach is the Blue Bar, which has live music or disc jockeys on the weekend.[21]

Amateur dramatics

An amateur theatre group, Porthtowan Players, formed in 1968,[22] operates from a permanent stage facility within Porthtowan Village Hall. The group puts on a pantomime, musical theatre show, short plays and a youth production each year.

In culture

  • Porthtowan was the inspiration for several paintings by G.E. Treweek entitled: A Glimpse of the Sea, Porthtowan; A Sketch of Porthtowan; and Looking up the Valley, Porthtowan.[23]

References

  1. "Godrevy Head to St Agnes". Natural England. 1989. http://www.sssi.naturalengland.org.uk/citation/citation_photo/1003195.pdf. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  2. "Godrevy Head to St Agnes map". Natural England. http://www.natureonthemap.naturalengland.org.uk/map.aspx?map=sssi&feature=1003195,sssi,HYPERLINK,LABEL. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  3. St Agnes Heritage Coast. Protected Planet. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  4. Species Protected Planet: St Agnes Heritage Coast. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  5. Look out St Agnes to Carn Gowla Walk. National Trust. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  6. National Monuments Record: No. 426067 – Allen's Mill
  7. 7.0 7.1 Simon Camm. Cornish Rocks and Minerals. Alison Hodge Publishers; March 2010 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-0-906720-71-4. p. 50.
  8. James Bastian Hill; Donald Alexander MacAlister; Sir John Smith Flett. The geology of Falmouth and Truro and of the mining district of Camborne and Redruth. Printed for H. M. Stationery Off., by Wyman & Sons; 1908 [cited 29 September 2012]. p. 241.
  9. Barton, D. Bradford (1965) A Guide to the Mines of West Cornwall; 2nd ed. Truro: D. Bradford Barton; p. 43
  10. Barton, D. Bradford (1965) A Guide to the Mines of West Cornwall; 2nd ed. Truro: D. Bradford Barton; p. 47
  11. Barry Gamble. Cornish Mines: Gwennap to the Tamar. Alison Hodge Publishers; April 2011 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-0-906720-82-0. p. 47.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Samuel Lewis. A Topographical Dictionary of England: With Historical and Statistical Descriptions. Lewis; 1833. p. PT 68.
  13. 13.0 13.1 William Jory Henwood. Address Delivered at the Spring Meeting of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, on the 23rd of May 1871. 1871 [cited 29 September 2012]. pp. 51-52.
  14. Lynne Mayers. Balmaidens. Hypatia Publications; 1 June 2004 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-1-872229-48-5. p. 27.
  15. Lynne Mayers. Balmaidens. Hypatia Publications; 1 June 2004 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-1-872229-48-5. pp. 64, 63-65.
  16. D. B. Barton. A Guide to the Mines of West Cornwall; 2nd ed. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1965. p. 42.
  17. Porthtowan. Beaches in Cornwall. 28 September 2012.
  18. Mark Rainsley. South West Sea Kayaking. Pesda Press; 15 April 2008 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-1-906095-05-5. p. 190.
  19. SAS / Rip Curl Cornish Open set for next weekend. Porthowan Beach, Cornwall, UK 9–11 August 2002. Surfers Village. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  20. Mark Rainsley. South West Sea Kayaking. Pesda Press; 15 April 2008 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-1-906095-05-5. p. 35.
  21. David Else; Fionn Davenport. Great Britain. Lonely Planet; 1 May 2009 [cited 29 September 2012]. ISBN 978-1-74104-491-1. p. 379.
  22. "Porthtowan Players history". http://www.porthtowanplayers.com/history/40-years. Retrieved 7 December 2012. 
  23. Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society. Annual report. 1892 [cited 29 September 2012]. p. 167.

Books

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