Bernard Deacon's Blog, page 19
September 8, 2022
Running from Ruan?
      The small parishes of Ruan Minor and Ruan Major should not be confused with Ruanlanihorne. (Ruan was a saint – in Old Cornish Rumon.) Ruan Major and Minor will be treated together here as they are neighbouring parishes on the Lizard peninsula, now combined with a third parish to make up the modern Grade-Ruan. Around … Continue reading Running from Ruan? →
  
    
    
    
        Published on September 08, 2022 23:38
    
September 5, 2022
Ruminating at Ruanlanihorne
      Ruanlanihorne, on the eastern side of the Fal estuary, is one of those places that might strike the casual visitor as warranting the epithet ‘timeless’, essentially unchanged since the 1800s. In one sense this could be true. Unaffected by the ups and downs of mining and well away from the major communication routes, with no … Continue reading Ruminating at Ruanlanihorne →
  
    
    
    
        Published on September 05, 2022 23:31
    
September 3, 2022
Clay labouring families at Roche
      Roche in mid-Cornwall is on the northern edge of the clay country. At the time the children in our database were born in 1850/51 the extraction of clay was only just beginning to scar the landscape. The creation of the white mountains of the clay country and the sterilisation of many square miles of countryside … Continue reading Clay labouring families at Roche →
  
    
    
    
        Published on September 03, 2022 23:40
    
August 31, 2022
Redruth, Cymru and Cumbria
      We have seen that the preferred destination of the majority of Redruth’s sons and daughters in the mid-1800s was the United States. Most of them would have begun their journey by travelling north to embark from Liverpool. Meanwhile, others went north and stayed there. Ellen Chegwidden was the daughter of a sawyer in Redruth in … Continue reading Redruth, Cymru and Cumbria →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 31, 2022 23:46
    
August 29, 2022
Some Redruth folk’s marital issues
      Occasionally, peering through the routine pages of the nineteenth century censuses examining the lives of our predecessors can seem to veer perilously close to prurient curiosity. Perhaps we discover something that they tried hard to hide – an illegitimate child brought up by the grandparents, a deserted wife describing herself as a widow, a bigamist … Continue reading Some Redruth folk’s marital issues →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 29, 2022 23:54
    
August 27, 2022
Redruth: America’s 51st state
      Redruth had been at the heart of Cornwall’s central mining district in the 1700s. In the days of copper, it was surrounded by the riches of Gwennap to the east and the mines of Illogan to the west. As copper faded after the 1860s and the centre of Cornish metal mining shifted westwards towards Camborne’s … Continue reading Redruth: America’s 51st state →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 27, 2022 23:52
    
August 25, 2022
Rame: a forgotten corner of Cornwall?
      Rame is tucked away in the far south-east of Cornwall. Sometimes dubbed Cornwall’s forgotten corner, the district is possibly one of the least familiar in Cornwall to most residents, even those who might pride themselves on their knowledge of Cornwall. Despite its proximity to the busy city of Plymouth across the Tamar estuary, Rame has … Continue reading Rame: a forgotten corner of Cornwall? →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 25, 2022 23:34
    
August 23, 2022
Quethiock – the importance of the family context
      We have seen in these blogs that many people left Cornwall in the nineteenth century. By now, all but the most casual reader will be aware that those from mining families were more likely to leave. But not everyone did. So why did some emigrate and others didn’t? Let’s look at an example from Quethiock, … Continue reading Quethiock – the importance of the family context →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 23, 2022 23:21
    
August 20, 2022
From Probus School to India
      In the summer of 1857 some native cavalrymen at Meerut, 40 miles north east of Delhi in India, rose in revolt against their British officers. The troops, employed by the East India Company had been enraged by rumours that evangelical British officers were plotting to replace Hinduism, Islam and other native religions with Christianity. Meanwhile, … Continue reading From Probus School to India →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 20, 2022 23:45
    
August 18, 2022
Probus School: Educating the Cornish (male) middle classes
      We’re told that the British Empire was won on the playing fields of Eton and similar institutions. It’s true that the English aristocracy were, by the late Victorian period, being educated generally for governing and more specifically for the imperial mission. Those not involved in running the home country would carve out colonies, subdue the … Continue reading Probus School: Educating the Cornish (male) middle classes →
  
    
    
    
        Published on August 18, 2022 23:33
    
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