Articles
1948 | Angarrack Puts Out Its Flags Angarrack was en fete on Saturday for the winding up of its gala festival
According to: read more »
1948 | Anganack Methodist Church was re-opened last week, after renovation
According to: read more »
1917 | FIRE AT ANGARRACK. SHOP BURNT OUT
According to: read more »
1725 | Reverberatory furnaces: Chyandour has 4, Ludgvan 2, Treloweth 3, Lelant 3 and six at Angarrack | Kalmeter journal
By 1725 the picture has changed dramatically and the details are provided by Henric Kalmeter in his journal. Chyandour now has four reverberatory furnaces having been converted from a blowing houses in 1717. Ludgvan has has two reverberatory furnaces opened in 1724 to replace the old blowing house. Treloweth, at Rose an Grous, has three reverberatory furnaces erected in 1720 and lastly, Trereife has four reverberatory furnaces dating from about 1716. In addition there are now three furnaces at Lelant and six at Angarrack, both of which might well have sent tin to Penzance to be coined. Not only has the technology changed to meet the demands of lode mining but the capacity has increased hugely. read more »
180525 | Hayle's 5th Century Christian burial stone, the Cunaide Stone subject of ongoing conservation work and investigatory 3D
After hundreds of years atop an Iron Age hill fort, Hayle's 5th Century Christian burial stone, the Cunaid read more »
1838 | Francis Harvey inherits Angarrack Inn due to Matthew Tremayne's debts of £225. Joseph Hockin(g) Innkeeper
In his will Matthew Tremayne left the Inn to his children, but he died admitting he owed over £100 to Francis Harvey.
7 March 1838 the children added to the will that Preston Wallis "the goods, chattels and credits of the said deceased may be granted and committed in due form of Law to Francis Harvey of the Parish of Phillack, Draper, a creditor of the said deceased and also a Trustee named and appointed in and by the said Will. And we do hereby promise"
12 Mar 1838 Francis Harvey went to the Archdeaconry Court of Cornwall to prove the debt was £225.
1833 | namely the Inn now in the occupation of my son William together with the stable and other outhouses thereto belonging
In father's will: "I give and bequeath unto my children, William, Henry, Alfred, John, Samuel and Mary equally all the property whatsoever that is my free inheritance namely the Inn now in the occupation of my son William together with the stable and other outhouses thereto belonging and the garden adjoining"
1909 | George Gardner-Symons paints Angarrack
1839 | Mrs Mary Courts crossing rail road line near Angarrack incline knocked down by descending train and fatally injured
16th May 1839, an elderly person, Mrs Mary Courts, nee Tremayne, when crossing the rail road line near the Angarrack incline, was knocked down by a descending train and fatally injured
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A booklet entitled, "Angarrack, The Singular History of a Cornish Village", by John Higgans, dated 1986 at Newton Abbot
1850 | TO BE LET from Michaelmas next, all that desirable Inn or Public-house, called the L A M B I N N | Angarrack Inn
Via The Royal Cornwall Gazette, Falmouth Packet, and General Advertiser (Truro, England), Friday, June 21, 1850; pg. [1]; Issue 2452. 19th Century British Library Newspapers: Part II.
PUBLIC HOUSE
In Angarrack, in Phillack, to be Let.
TO BE LET from Michaelmas next, all that desirable
Inn or Public-house, called the
L A M B I N N
And Gardens thereto annexed with the appurtenances,
situate in Angarrack, in the parish of Phillack, in the
county of Cornwall, and now in the occupation of Mr.
James Polkinghorne as tenant thereof.
For viewing the premises apply to the said Mr.
POLKINGHORNE, and for further particulars to
Mr. ARUNDEL ROGERS,
Solicitor, Helston. read more »

