In the late 19th century, Cornwall was a land of dramatic contrast, where the rugged industrial heritage of tin mining met the emerging allure of the “Cornish Riviera.”
As the deep shafts of the Levant and Botallack mines began to fall silent, the region reinvented itself through the arrival of the Great Western Railway, which brought Victorian travelers to its jagged Atlantic shores for the very first time. This era was defined by a unique, salt-aired romanticism, a world of whitewashed fishing cottages in St. Ives, the mystical silhouette of St. Michael’s Mount, and the bustling harbors of Penzance crowded with traditional luggers.
Life in Cornwall during this period was deeply tied to the rhythms of the sea and the soil. While the fishing fleets hauled in vast catches of pilchards, a new generation of artists, most notably the Newlyn School, flocked to the coast, captivated by the extraordinary clarity of the light and the raw, honest lives of the local people.
These wonderful Photochrom prints of late 19th-century Cornwall capture a fleeting moment in history: a maritime kingdom caught between its ancient Celtic roots and the burgeoning modern world, all framed by the restless, turquoise waters of the Celtic Sea.
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| Boscastle, the village street, Cornwall, England, circa 1890s |
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| Boscastle, view from New Road, Cornwall, England, circa 1890s |
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| Bedruthan Steps, Cornwall, England, circa 1890s |
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| Boscastle and Forraburg, Cornwall, England, circa 1890s |
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| Boscastle, harbor looking west, Cornwall, England, circa 1890s |