Falmouth, Cornwall

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Falmouth (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell; Template:Langx<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>) is a town, civil parish and port on the River Fal on the south coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.<ref>Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 204 Truro & Falmouth Template:ISBN</ref>

Falmouth was founded in 1613 by the Killigrew family on a site near the existing Pendennis Castle. It developed as a port on the Carrick Roads harbour, overshadowing the earlier town of Penryn. In the 19th century after the arrival of the railways, tourism became important to its economy. In modern times, both industries maintain a presence in Falmouth and the town is also home to the National Maritime Museum Cornwall, a campus of Falmouth University and Falmouth Art Gallery. At the 2021 census the parish had a population of 24,032.

Etymology

The name Falmouth is of English origin, a reference to the town's situation on the mouth of the River Fal. The Cornish language name, Aberfala or Aberfal, is of identical meaning.

History

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Early history

File:The Old Town Hall, Falmouth.jpg
The Old Town Hall

In 1540, Henry VIII built Pendennis Castle in Falmouth to defend Carrick Roads. The main town of the district was then at Penryn. A late-16th century map shows 'Arweneck' manor house with some ordinary dwellings at 'Smithick, alias Pennycomequick' near today's Market Strand.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Pennycomequick is an Anglicisation of the Celtic Template:Lang 'head of the creek';<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> there is still a Pennycomequick district in Plymouth.

In the late 16th century, under threat from the Spanish Armada, the defences at Pendennis were strengthened by the building of angled ramparts. During the Civil War, Pendennis Castle was the second to last fort to surrender to the Parliamentary Army.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Sir John Killigrew created the town of Falmouth shortly after 1613.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Monument in Falmouth (8786).jpg
Killigrew monument in Arwenack Street

After the Civil War, Sir Peter Killigrew received royal patronage when he gave land for the building of the Church of King Charles the Martyr, dedicated to Charles I, "the Martyr".<ref>Guide to the Parish Church (No date, after 1997)</ref>

The seal of Falmouth was blazoned as "An eagle displayed with two heads and on each wing with a tower" (based on the arms of Killigrew). The arms of the borough of Falmouth were "Arg[ent]. a double-headed eagle displayed Sa[ble]. each wing charged with a tower Or. in base issuant from the water barry wavy a rock also Sa. thereon surmounting the tail of the eagle a staff also proper flying therefrom a pennant Gu[les]".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Being the nearest large harbour to the entrance of the English Channel, two Royal Navy squadrons were permanently stationed here. In the 1790s one was under the command of Sir Edward Pellew (later Viscount Exmouth) and the other under the command of Sir John Borlase Warren. Each squadron consisted of five frigates, with either 32 or 44 guns. Pellew's flagship was HMS Indefatigable and Warren's HMS Révolutionnaire. At the time of the French Revolutionary Wars, battle ships and small vessels were continually arriving with war prizes taken from the French ships and prisoners of war. Near Penryn, at Tregellick and Roscrow, were two large camps for the French prisoners.<ref name="cman212">Template:Cite news</ref>

The Old Town Hall in the High Street was completed in 1710.<ref>Template:NHLE</ref> The corporation moved to a new town hall on The Moor, now the Palacio Lounge, in 1866.<ref>Template:NHLE</ref>

The Falmouth Packet Service operated out of Falmouth for over 160 years between 1689 and 1851. Its purpose was to carry mail to and from Britain's growing empire. At the end of the 18th century, there were thirty to forty, small, full rigged, three-masted ships. The crews were hand picked and both officers and men often made large fortunes from the private contraband trade they took part in, while under the protection of being a Government ship, free from customs and excise searches and therefore payment of duty.<ref name="cman212"/> Captain John Bullock worked in the Packet Service and built Penmere Manor in 1825.

19th and 20th centuries

File:Falmouth Lifeboat (DSCN0324).jpg
The Falmouth Lifeboat moored by the docks with the old town and The Penryn River in the background

In 1805 news of Britain's victory and Admiral Nelson's death at Trafalgar reached Falmouth from the schooner Pickle and was taken to London by post chaise. On 2 October 1836 Template:HMS anchored at Falmouth at the end of her noted survey voyage around the world.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> That evening, Charles Darwin left the ship and took the Mail coach to his family home at The Mount, Shrewsbury.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The ship stayed a few days and Captain Robert FitzRoy visited the Fox family at nearby Penjerrick Gardens. Darwin's shipmate Sulivan later made his home in the nearby waterside village of Flushing, then home to many naval officers.Template:Cn

In 1839 Falmouth was the scene of a gold dust robbery when £47,600 worth of gold dust from Brazil was stolen on arrival at the port.<ref>The Times; Saturday, 29 June 1839; pg. 6: The Gold-Dust Robbery</ref>

The Falmouth Docks were developed from 1858,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) opened Falmouth Lifeboat Station nearby in 1867. The present building dates from 1993 and also houses HM Coastguard.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The RNLI operates two lifeboats from Falmouth: Richard Cox Scott, a Template:Convert Template:Sclass2 all-weather boat,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and B-916 Robina Nixon Chard, an Atlantic 85 inshore lifeboat.

File:Jacob's Ladder - geograph.org.uk - 726196.jpg
Jacob's Ladder, an 1840s flight of mostly dressed granite steps, rises from Killigrew Street to Vernon Place.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Near the town centre is Kimberley Park, named after the Earl of Kimberley who leased the park's land to the borough of Falmouth. Today the park has exotic and ornate plants and trees.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Falmouth was connected to Plymouth and the rest of the United Kingdom by electric telegraph on 30 August 1857.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The telegraph office was adjoining the Custom House and Globe Hotel. In 1869 the telegraph office moved to the new Falmouth Post Office on Church Street.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

A telephone trunk line to Falmouth was opened in January 1899. It was noted in Lake's Falmouth Packet and Cornwall Advertiser of 14 January 1899 that "the tariff for conversations carried on over any distance is too high to suggest the use of the telephone for anything except urgent business".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The exchange was over the Post Office on The Moor.

The Cornwall Railway reached Falmouth on 24 August 1863. The railway brought new prosperity to Falmouth, as it made it easy for tourists to reach the town. It also allowed the swift transport of the goods recently disembarked from the ships in the port. The town now has three railway stations. Falmouth Docks railway station is the original terminus and is close to Pendennis Castle and Castle beach. Falmouth Town railway station was opened on 7 December 1970 and is convenient for the National Maritime Museum Cornwall, the waterfront, Gyllyngvase beach and town centre.

Penmere railway station opened on 1 July 1925 towards the north of Falmouth and within easy walking distance of the top of The Moor. All three stations are served by regular trains from Truro on the Maritime Line. Penmere Station was renovated in the late 1990s, using the original sign and materials.

The town saw a total eclipse of the Sun at 11:11 a.m. on 11 August 1999. This eclipse lasted just over two minutes at Falmouth, the longest duration in the United Kingdom.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Second World War

File:DSCN1679StNazaireMemorialFALMOUTH.jpg
St Nazaire memorial

During World War II, 31 people were killed in Falmouth by German bombing. An anti-submarine net was laid from Pendennis to St Mawes, to prevent enemy U-boats entering the harbour.

It was the launching point for the St Nazaire Raid in 1942. Between 1943 and 1944, Falmouth was a base for American troops preparing for the D-Day invasions.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Many of the troops involved embarked from Falmouth harbour and the surrounding rivers and creeks. There are commemorative plaques at Turnaware Point, Falmouth Watersports marina, Tolverne and Trebah gardens.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The United States Navy had a large base in Falmouth harbour as well.

Post War

The Template:SS, a cargo vessel that had sailed from Hamburg on 21 December 1951, ran into a storm on the Western Approaches to the English Channel. A crack appeared on her deck and the cargo shifted. A number of vessels went to her aid including the tug Turmoil which was stationed in Falmouth, but they found it initially impossible to take the Flying Enterprise in tow. The ship was finally taken in tow on 5 January 1952 by the Turmoil when she was some Template:Convert from Falmouth. It took several days to reach port. On 10 January the tow line parted when the ship was still Template:Convert from Falmouth. Two other tugs joined the battle to save the ship and cargo, but the Flying Enterprise finally sank later that day. Captain Carlsen and the tug's mate Kenneth Dancy, the only crew members still on board, were picked up by Turmoil and taken to Falmouth to a hero's welcome.

Historic estates

  • Arwenack, of which a small portion remains, was the estate which occupied the site before the development of the town of Falmouth; it was long the seat of the Killigrew family.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Governance

File:Passmore Edwards Free Library, Falmouth (8931).jpg
Municipal Building, The Moor: Town council's meeting place

There are two tiers of local government covering Falmouth, at parish (town) and unitary authority level: Falmouth Town Council and Cornwall Council. The town council has its offices at the Old Post Office on The Moor, and meets at the adjoining Municipal Building (built 1896), which also houses the town's library and an art gallery.<ref>Template:NHLE</ref><ref name=TC>Template:Cite web</ref>

For elections to Cornwall Council, there are four electoral divisions with Falmouth in their names: Falmouth Arwenack, Falmouth Boslowick, Falmouth Penwerris, Falmouth Smithick, and Falmouth Tescobeads and Budock (the latter also covers the parish of Budock). Each division elects one councillor.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref>

Administrative history

Falmouth historically formed part of the ancient parish of Budock in the Kerrier Hundred of Cornwall.<ref name=Youngs/> The town was incorporated as a borough by a charter from Charles II dated 5 October 1661.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Three years later, in 1664, a new parish of Falmouth was also created from part of Budock. The borough only covered the core of the nascent town, comprising Template:Convert of land around High Street, Market Street and Church Street, whereas the parish also covered surrounding rural areas ceded from Budock.<ref name=Youngs>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=OS1909>Template:Cite web</ref> The borough was reformed to become a municipal borough in 1836 under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835, which standardised how most boroughs operated across the country.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The urban area increasingly grew beyond the borough boundaries, and in 1864 the part of Falmouth parish outside the borough was made a local government district administered by an elected local board. After 1864 there was therefore a borough council responsible for the central part of the town and a separate local board responsible for the suburbs.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> Parish responsibilities under the poor laws were also administered separately for the borough and the remainder of Falmouth parish outside the borough. As such these two areas became separate civil parishes called Falmouth Borough and Falmouth in 1866, when the legal definition of 'parish' was changed to be the areas used for administering the poor laws.<ref name=Youngs/>

By 1892, it was estimated that the borough only contained a third of the population of the urban area. The borough was therefore extended in 1892 to take in Falmouth parish (the local board of which was abolished) plus parts of Budock parish, including Pendennis Castle south of the town and the area around Greenbank Quay north of the town.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=OS1909/> Civil parish boundaries were not automatically changed by the borough's extension in 1892. The parishes within the borough were subsequently united into a single parish of Falmouth matching the borough in 1920.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The borough was enlarged again in 1934, taking in further areas west of the town.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The borough of Falmouth was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, when the area became part of the Carrick district.<ref>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref><ref>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref> A successor parish called Falmouth was created at the same time, covering the area of the abolished borough.<ref name=successor>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref> As part of the 1974 reforms, parish councils were given the right to declare their parishes to be a town, allowing them to take the title of town council and giving the title of mayor to the council's chairperson.<ref>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref> The new parish council for Falmouth exercised this right, taking the name Falmouth Town Council.<ref name=TC/>

Carrick district was abolished in 2009. Cornwall County Council then took on district-level functions, making it a unitary authority, and was renamed Cornwall Council.<ref>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref><ref>Template:Cite legislation UK</ref>

Economy, industry and tourism

File:Falmouth Cornwall Harbour.jpg
Falmouth Harbour, National Maritime Museum, Cornwall and Pendennis Castle.

While Falmouth's maritime activity has much declined from its heyday, the docks are still a major contributor to the town's economy. It is the largest port in Cornwall. Falmouth remains a cargo port and the bunkering of vessels and the transfer of cargoes also keep the port's facilities busy. The port is popular with cruise ship operators.Template:Cn

Further up the sheltered reaches of the Fal there are often several ships laid up, awaiting sailing orders and/or new owners/charterers.

Falmouth is a popular holiday destination and it is now primarily a tourist resort. The five main beaches starting next to Pendennis Castle and moving along the coast towards the Helford river are Castle, Tunnel, Gyllyngvase, Swanpool and Maenporth beaches. The National Maritime Museum Cornwall opened in February 2003. The building was designed by the architect M. J. Long.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Falmouth & Penryn Packet, first published in 1858, is still based in the town as the lead title in a series of Packet Newspapers for central and western Cornwall.<ref name="britishpapers1">Template:Cite web</ref>

The West Briton newspaper, first published in 1810, is a weekly tabloid newspaper which has a Falmouth & Penryn edition reporting on the area.

Culture

File:FalmouthObservatory2.jpg
Meteorological Observation Tower, built by the "Poly"

Falmouth has many literary connections. The town was the birthplace of Toad, Mole and Rat: Kenneth Grahame's classic The Wind in the Willows began as a series of letters sent to his son. The first two were written at the Greenbank Hotel whilst Grahame was a guest in May 1907. Reproductions of the letters are currently on display in the hotel. Poldark author Winston Graham knew the town well and set his novel The Forgotten Story (1945) in Falmouth.

The town has been the setting for several films and television programmes. British film star Will Hay was a familiar face in Falmouth in 1935 whilst filming his comedy Windbag the Sailor. The film had many scenes of the docks area. The docks area was featured in some scenes with John Mills for the 1948 film Scott of the Antarctic. Robert Newton, Bobby Driscoll and other cast members of the 1950 Walt Disney film Treasure Island (some scenes were filmed along the River Fal) were visitors to the town.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Stars from the BBC TV serial The Onedin Line stayed in the town during filming in the late 1970s. In 2011 Paramount Pictures filmed parts of the film World War Z starring Brad Pitt in Falmouth Docks and off the coast.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Falmouth had the first "Polytechnic": Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society which went into administration briefly in 2010 but is now a feature of the town with frequent art exhibitions, stage performances and an art house cinema.

Falmouth is home to many theatre groups, including Falmouth Theatre Company, Falmouth Young Generation and Amity Theatre. Falmouth Theatre Company, also known as FTC, is the oldest local company with performances dating back to 1927.

The Falmouth Art Gallery is a public gallery with a diverse 19th and 20th century art collection including many notable modern Cornish artists exhibited in four to five seasonal exhibitions a year, as well as a "family friendly and free" community and schools education programme.

Falmouth has its own community radio station Source FM broadcasting on 96.1 FM and online.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2016, Falmouth won the "Great British High Street 2016" award, in the 'Coastal Community' category.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Religious sites

File:King Charles Church Falmouth.JPG
Falmouth Parish Church, Church Street, dedicated to "King Charles the Martyr"

The Anglican parish churches are dedicated to King Charles the Martyr and to All Saints. A third church is St Michael's Church, Penwerris. The Roman Catholic church of St Mary Immaculate is in Killigrew Street. It was designed by J. A. Hansom and built in 1868; the tower and spire (1881) are by J. S. Hansom; the baptistery and porch were added in 1908 to the original designs. The style is a blend of Gothic and Burgundian Romanesque, creating a very French effect. Two of the stained glass windows are early works of Dom Charles Norris.<ref>Beacham, Peter & Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014). Cornwall. New Haven: Yale University Press. Template:ISBN; pp. 187-88</ref> Falmouth Methodist Church is also in Killigrew Street; the street façade is "one of the grandest expressions of Methodism in Cornwall". The United Reformed Church (originally Bible Christian) is in Berkeley Vale. The former synagogue (1816) is one of the earliest surviving synagogue buildings in England; it was in use until 1879.<ref>Beacham (2014). p. 188</ref>

Transport

File:J79154 Yul cdg 20140624-044343.15 FalmouthAngleterre.jpg
Aerial view of Falmouth: Penryn River centre left; part of Carrick Roads top; part of Falmouth Bay right

Falmouth harbourTemplate:Anchor

Falmouth is famous for its harbour. Together with Carrick Roads, it forms the third deepest natural harbour in the world, and the deepest in Western Europe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It has been the start or finish point of various round-the-world record-breaking voyages, such as those of Robin Knox-Johnston and Dame Ellen MacArthur.

Road

Falmouth is a terminus of the A39 road, connecting to Bath, Somerset some Template:Convert distant although such a route has now been surpassed by the A303, A37 and A367. The A39 connects Falmouth with the A30 via Truro. The A30 provides a fast link between Falmouth and the M5 motorway at Exeter Template:Convert to the northeast.

Most commercial bus services are provided by First Kernow who have an outstation in Falmouth. Other services are run by Office & Transport Services on behalf of Transport for Cornwall.

Railway

Falmouth has three railway stations (described above) at the southern end of an Template:Convert branch line (the Maritime Line) from Template:Stnlink. The train takes roughly 28 minutes inbound and 24 minutes outbound with stops at Template:Stnlink, Template:Stnlink, Template:Stnlink, Template:Stnlink and Template:Stnlink.

Ferries

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File:St Mawes ferry.jpg
St Mawes ferry returning to Falmouth

Falmouth has regular ferry routes connecting to St Mawes,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Flushing<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Trelissick, Malpas and Truro.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Education

There are five primary schools in the town and one secondary school, namely Falmouth School.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Falmouth University has a campus at the original town site, Woodlane, and another in the Combined Universities in Cornwall campus at Tremough, Penryn, which it shares with the University of Exeter. It offers undergraduate and postgraduate courses chiefly in the fields of Art, Design and Media. The University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus offers a range of undergraduate and postgraduate courses, often with a particular focus on the environment and sustainability, and also hosts the world-renowned Camborne School of Mines (formerly located nearby in Camborne), which specialises in the understanding and management of the Earth's natural processes, resources and the environment.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2015, actor and comedian Dawn French was installed as Falmouth University's chancellor.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Falmouth Marine School, formerly Falmouth Technical College, specialises in traditional and modern boat-building, marine engineering, marine environmental science and marine leisure sport. The campus is part of Cornwall College.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Sport and recreation

The town has a football team in the Southern Football League Division One South, Falmouth Town A.F.C., who play at Bickland Park in the north-west of the town, and also Falmouth RFC, a rugby union club who play at The Recreation Ground, a site at the top of The Moor.

Falmouth is also home to one of Cornwall's biggest cricket clubs, where four teams represent the town in the Cornwall Cricket League, with the 1st team playing in the Cornwall Premier League. Falmouth CC play at the Trescobeas ground on Trescobeas Road.

File:Falmouth sunset.jpg
Winter sunset over Falmouth Bay from Castle Drive.

With its proximity to sheltered and unsheltered waters, Falmouth has long been a popular boating and water sports location. It is, for example, a centre of Cornish pilot gig rowing, the home of Gyllyngvase Surf Life Saving Club (founded 2008)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and a popular location for sea swimming. Solo yachtsman Robert Manry crossed the Atlantic from Falmouth, Massachusetts (which is named after Falmouth) to Falmouth, Cornwall, from June–August 1965 in the thirteen-and-a-half-foot Tinkerbelle—this was the smallest boat to make the crossing at the time. The town was the location for the 1966, 1982 and 1998 and 2014 Tall Ships' Race in which approximately ninety Tall Ships set sail for Lisbon, Portugal. The town is also hosted the start of the 2021 race.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Clear

Cornish wrestling

Falmouth has been a major centre for Cornish wrestling for centuries.<ref name="RCG17051806">Royal Cornwall Gazette, 17 May 1806.</ref><ref name="LFP05081904">Lake's Falmouth Packet and Cornwall Advertiser, 5 August 1904.</ref><ref name="WBCA12051952">West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser, 12 May 1952.</ref> Tournaments were often badged as "the championship of the West of England".<ref name="LFP22081905">Lake's Falmouth Packet and Cornwall Advertiser, 11 August 1905.</ref> Bouts were held at various venues around the town, including Pendennis Castle.<ref name="RCG10061953">Royal Cornwall Gazette, 10 June 1853.</ref> Alfred Ernest Trenoweth (1868–1942) from Falmouth was well known as light weight champion wrestler of Cornwall.<ref name="WBCA26101942">Former wrestling champion, West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser, 26 October 1942, p2.</ref> Another champion wrestler from Falmouth was Pellew, who was especially notable, since he only had one arm!<ref name="WBCA18071878">Truro wrestling match, The West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser, 18 July 1878, p5.</ref><ref name="WBCA13071885">Wrestling Match, The West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser, 13 Jul 1885, p2.</ref>

Climate

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Notable people

Early times to 1780

1780 to 1810

1810 to 1850

1850 to 1910

1910 to present

Sport

Landmarks

Twinning

Falmouth is twinned with Douarnenez in Brittany, France and Rotenburg an der Wümme, in Lower Saxony, Germany.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

Further reading

  • Symons, Alan (1994). Falmouth's Wartime Memories. Arwenack Press. Template:ISBN
  • Whetter, James (2003). The History of Falmouth. Lyfrow Trelyspen. Template:ISBN

References

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