Who was the man who photographed the miners? How did he do it? What risks did he take? Didn’t he always operate in Cornwall? Read the story behind the stunning photographs of Cornish mining in the 1800s, by John Charles Burrow…
Category Archives: Cornwall in the 1800s
Paul Rabey and The Foreign Girls’ Protection Society: They Died With Their Shoes On, Part Five
A sinister and extraordinary post…Victorian Cornwall’s most notorious con-artist and Victorian London’s dark underworld…an unpleasant conclusion to this series…
Paul Rabey and the Bristol Con: They Died With Their Shoes On, Part Four
Sham mines in Perranporth, Bristol men with more cash than sense, acts of vengeance, court hearings, valueless shares, forgery, suspect bank accounts, mountains of dirty money and, in the midst of it all, Cornwall’s most infamous con artist!
The Two Paul Rabeys: They Died With Their Shoes On, Part Three
Even criminals and rogues have families to turn to…continuing the career of Paul Rabey the Younger, Victorian Cornwall’s most notorious con man…
Paul Rabey and the False Imprisonment: They Died With Their Shoes On, Part Two
What happens when you cross Victorian Cornwall’s most notorious con man?
They Died With Their Shoes On: The Career of Paul Rabey the Younger, Part One
The first in a five-part series. Paul Rabey was a cunning and malevolent Victorian con-man who made, and lost, a fortune selling fraudulent mining shares to unsuspecting businessmen. In his day, he was notorious…
Trouble in Clay Country: The Food Riots of 1847, Part Five
The rioters finally meet their match in St Austell. Bayonets at the ready…
The Fugitive: James Jewell: A Prologue to Part Five of the Food Riots of 1847
A rioter on the run…who did he see? Who did he speak to? Did he escape?
Hellfire Corner: Redruth: The Cornish Food Riots, Part Four
Violence, looting, and arrests in Redruth as the miners and militia face off…continuing The Cornish Food Riots of 1847…
Commotion Time: Pool, June 4, 1847: The Cornish Food Riots, Part Three
No relief in Helston. Little in Penzance. Matters get ugly when 3,000 starving people arrive in Pool. Part three of The Cornish Food Riots of 1847…