Port Isaac from West, Cornwall, c.1905 - Valentine's Postcard
Port Isaac from West, Cornwall, c.1905 - Valentine's Postcard
Mal sehen, ob der Fisherman's Friends 2 gut ist. Der erste Teil hatte mir gefallen. Jedenfalls ist #PortIsaac immer nett anzusehen. ⛵
#FishermansFriends2
Port Isaac Harbour from Fore Street, Cornwall, c1950s - George Ellis RP Postcard
Finding fishermen in Victorian Cornwall
While the status of the miner on Cornwall’s coat of arms seems assured, warranted by their 30 per cent or so of the total workforce, that of fishermen is less secure. In contrast, the two per cent of the enumerated adult male labour force in 1861 who were described as fishermen suggests they were a much rarer breed.
Nevertheless, there were in excess of ten fishermen in just over ten per cent (24) of Cornwall’s parishes, this proportion being much higher of course if we exclude inland parishes. Yet Cornwall’s full-time fishers in 1861 were almost as geographically concentrated as its clay workers. Fully 55 per cent of fishermen were found in just two parishes in the far west. St Ives was home to 302 fishermen while Paul, containing the villages of Newlyn and Mousehole, hosted 748, more than one in three of all Cornwall’s fishermen.
The most unexpected aspect of the map above is the absence of fishermen on the north coast, particularly Port Isaac and Padstow. Just eight fishermen were recorded as such in the parish of St Endellion, which included Port Isaac. Meanwhile, we’re informed that Padstow was home to just two. Did these places really have very few full-time fishermen in the 1860s? Could there be missing fishermen, the local boats perhaps being at sea at the time of the census? Or were fishermen recorded as mariners, both parishes being home to considerable numbers of the latter.
More generally, outside Newlyn and St Ives fishing was likely to be more of a part-time activity. The many examples of men described as fisherman and something else in the census hints at this. Full-time deep-sea fishing was a growing industry but considerable numbers were still employed in seine fishing, taking the shoals of pilchards that appeared close to the Cornish coasts every year. Seine fishing was a part-time pursuit, heavily capitalised but employing men for only a few weeks at most. These are lost to us in the census, disguised by their more mundane and all year-round callings as masons, grocers’ assistants, labourers or whatever.
Chapel in the Valley, Port Isaac, Cornwall, c.1960 - RP Postcard
Church Hill, Port Isaac, Cornwall, c.1930 - Sweetman RP Postcard
Port Isaac, Cornwall, c.1990s - John Hinde Postcard
https://www.ebid.net/uk/for-sale/port-isaac-cornwall-c-1990s-john-hinde-postcard-220981903.htm
Photos from our holiday in Cornwall last week.
#portisaac #cornwall #polperro #holiday #photography #photos
Die Serie #DocMartin spielt in einer schönen Landschaft.
#Cornwall #PortIsaac ⛵
https://www.amazon.de/gp/video/detail/B0711YTSDJ/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r
What the #beach means at #PortIsaac in #Cornwall - https://manonabeach.com/north-cornwall/port-isaac
#portisaac from a cottage rented right on the cost. Beautiful scenery! #photo #photography #iPhone #photos
Pumpkin running and having a crack at swimming in the River Otter, Tipton St John.
Poppy, swimming in the Otter with beautiful Tara in the background, and posing in Cornwall: a truly international dog.
#miniaturedachshund #minidaxie #littleone #PoppyDog #gorgeous #PortIsaac #Cornwall #water #DogsAtTheSeaside #dogsofmastodon #Pumpkin #RiverOtter #TiptonStJohn #sisters #dogsisters #Throwback
Poppy on tour. Cornwall, maybe five years ago.
#miniaturedachshund #minidaxie #littleone #PoppyDog #gorgeous #PortIsaac #Cornwall #water #DogsAtTheSeaside #dogsofmastodon