The wreck of the steam ship Rosedale on Porthminster Beach, St Ives, after hurricane-force gales in November 1893: https://1894diary.wordpress.com/2016/04/11/shipwreck/ …pic.twitter.com/EiHbjjA0I0
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The wreck of the steam ship Rosedale on Porthminster Beach, St Ives, after hurricane-force gales in November 1893: https://1894diary.wordpress.com/2016/04/11/shipwreck/ …pic.twitter.com/EiHbjjA0I0
Old Houses, St Ives, Cornwall, by Thomas Maidment: https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/old-houses-st-ives-cornwall-68104 …pic.twitter.com/lsHxTAGhkM
Another view of the wrecks on Porthminster Beach, St Ives (Cornwall), in January 1908: https://www.placeify.co.uk/stivesarchive/#content-21 …pic.twitter.com/7x86EB29cN
Beach Scene, St Ives (1886) — Stanhope Alexander Forbes: https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/beach-scene-st-ives-188511 …pic.twitter.com/LKyKLGUCcz
Those figures on the beach are presumably following the great Cornish tradition of ship-wrecking and robbing
Possibly! Though I suspect they may simply be curious, given date and presence of a photographer!
Those great sailing ships are beautiful
Aren't they! I can certainly imagine going down to have a look if they were parked on the beach...!
The storms of 1908 could not have been as bad as the storms 2018. The boats in Holyhead were not as lucky.
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