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It was built of local stone with facings of St Stephen’s granite. The west window was given by the daughter of Staff-Commander Vincent of Southampton in memory of her parents and cost 100 guineas. The chancel window is a gift of the relatives of Miss Cullah who died whilst on a visit to St Mawes.
A second chapel was built by the Earl Temple on Church Hill in 1807; and rebuilt in 1881. St Mawes' Church was opened by the Bishop of Truro George Wilkinson on 5 December 1884. [4] Local opinion holds that St Mawes built the first landing at the harbour to help pilgrims access his Holy Well, which is preserved on nearby Grove Hill. [5] St ...
Early Cape Cod Cottage, Stamford Historical Society museum. NRHP. [27] Stanton-Davis Homestead Museum: Stonington: 1700 A working farm for the last 350 years. NRHP. [28] [29] Eells-Stow House: Milford: 1700 Served as a hospital during Revolutionary War, now a museum. [30] Shelley House: Madison: 1700 Dated to before 1700 by J. Frederick Kelly.
St Mawes (Cornish: Lannvowsedh) is a village on the end of the Roseland Peninsula, in the eastern side of Falmouth harbour, on the south coast of Cornwall, England.The village, formerly two separate hamlets, lies on the east bank of the Carrick Roads, a large waterway created after the Ice Age from an ancient valley which flooded as the melt waters caused the sea level to rise.
St Martin's Methodist Church, Isles of Scilly; St Martin's Church, St Martin's; St Mary Immaculate Church, Falmouth; St Mary's Methodist Church, Isles of Scilly; St Mary's Church, St Mary's; St Michael and All Angels Church, Bude; Sancreed Parish Church; St Andrew's Church, Cawsand; St Just in Penwith Parish Church; St Mawes' Church, St Mawes
Operated by the Westport Historical Society, Victorian period house with changing exhibits of local history and art, also Museum of Westport History White Memorial Conservation Center: Litchfield: Litchfield: Natural history: Natural history museum, trails Widener Gallery at the Austin Arts Center: Hartford: Hartford: Art: Part of Trinity ...
The History of Coast Artillery in the British Army. Uckfield, UK: The Naval and Military Press. ISBN 9781781491157. Morley, B. M. (1976). Henry VIII and the Development of Coastal Defence. London, UK: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 0116707771. Oliver, Samuel Pasfield (1875). Pendennis and St Mawes: An Historical Sketch of Two Cornish ...
St Mawes Castle (Cornish: Kastel Lannvowsedh) is an artillery fort constructed by Henry VIII near Falmouth, Cornwall, between 1540 and 1542. It formed part of the King's Device programme to protect against invasion from France and the Holy Roman Empire , and defended the Carrick Roads waterway at the mouth of the River Fal .