#staustell — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #staustell, aggregated by home.social.
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#1250 Henrietta Miles - Barrows on the St Austell Granite, Cornwall. Cornwall Archaeological Society, Truro, 1975, Offprint from Cornish Archaeology 14.
#HenriettaQuinnell #CornwallArchaeologicalSociety #Archaeology #Barrows #StAustell #Cornwall #BookOfTheDay
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Digging for riches: not just miners but quarriers
Most modern employment classifications treat mining and quarrying as a single economic sector. So how many more workers did clay extraction and quarrying add to the mining and quarrying sector in 1861? The answer is not that many when compared with the dominant mining for copper, tin, lead and other minerals.
While metal mines accounted for 30 per cent of adult male workers in 1861, quarrying added a maximum of 1.8 per cent and the china clay industry another 1.1 per cent. Nonetheless, this means that almost a third of Cornwall’s men in the early 1860s were directly engaged in working the natural underground resources of the region. There would have been many others who were indirectly dependent on this sector, something that would have dire consequences when mining began to contract in importance.
China clay was still in its infancy in the early 1860s, although it was growing fast and was destined to take over from mining as the main industrial pursuit in mid-Cornwall well before the end of the century. As the map above shows, this was an extremely concentrated business, focused almost entirely on the St Austell district in mid-Cornwall.
Quarrying on the other hand was more widely distributed. While there were 91 parishes in 1861 each with ten or more metal miners, there were just ten with ten clay workers or more but 38 with more than this number of quarrymen. The two principal quarrying districts – St Teath and Tintagel for slate and the eastern part of Carnmenellis near Penryn for granite – can clearly be identified from the map.
#chinaClay #granite #slateQuarries #StAustell #StTeath #Tintagel
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Mud Maid – Living sculpture by Sue and Pete Hill (5 photos and video)
Sculptor Sue and Pete Hill The Mud Maid is a living sculpture by Sue and Pete Hill created 1998 at Lost Gardens of Heligan, Pentewan, St.Austell, Cornwall, England. Depending on the season, the mud maid’s ‘hair’ and ‘clothes’ change when the seasonal plants and moss grow over the sculpture. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlG5SBmeE5s What do you think about the Mud Maid?https://streetartutopia.com/2024/10/24/mud-maid-living-sculpture-by-sue-hill/
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#384 Charles Thomas (ed) - Cornish Archaeology - Hendyscans Kernow, No 12, 1973. Cornwall Archaeological Society, Truro. #Cornwall #Archaeology #CornwallArchaeologicalSociety #CharlesThomas #StAustell #BookOfTheDay
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#AkshataMurty thinking, "If only there was something we could do for #Cornwall".
Mr & Mrs #RichieRich in #StAustell this morning... -
St Austell mum saved by quick-thinking five-year-old son after she had seizures
https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/cornwall-police-praise-arthur-5-8073160
#StAustell #Cornwall #UK #Epilepsy #Seizure #YoungHero #Bravery #Award
What a lovely news item !
Makes such a difference to hear such things amidst all the doom-and-gloom articles we read every minute of every day, everywhere we look.
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#EarthGoddess statue in Cornish town sparks unholy row with #Church leaders | #Cornwall | The Guardian
“This made up god is an affront to our made up god.” Apparently, the clergy in #StAustell haven’t realized that it’s the 21st century.